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Title: Medicine and the Church
Author: Geoffrey Rhodes, - To be updated
Language: English
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MEDICINE AND THE CHURCH



  MEDICINE
  AND THE CHURCH

  BEING A SERIES OF STUDIES ON THE RELATIONSHIP
  BETWEEN THE PRACTICE OF MEDICINE AND
  THE CHURCH’S MINISTRY TO THE SICK


  BY

  SIR CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, K.C.B., F.R.S.
  A. W. ROBINSON, D.D.
  CHARLES BUTTAR, M.D.
  STEPHEN PAGET, F.R.C.S.
  BISHOP OF BLOEMFONTEIN.
  HON. SYDNEY HOLLAND.
  PREBENDARY FAUSSET, M.A.
  JANE WALKER, M.D.
  T. B. HYSLOP, M.D.
  ELLIS ROBERTS.
  M. CARTA STURGE.
  H. G. G. MACKENZIE, M.A., M.B.


  EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION, BY
  GEOFFREY RHODES


  WITH A FOREWORD BY THE
  LORD BISHOP OF WINCHESTER


  LONDON
  KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO., LTD.,
  DRYDEN HOUSE, GERRARD STREET, W.
  1910



FOREWORD

BY

THE LORD BISHOP OF WINCHESTER


  FARNHAM CASTLE, SURREY:
  _July 4, 1910_.

  Dear Mr. Geoffrey Rhodes,

The appearance of your volume is very welcome. There is, I believe,
a real need for such a work. You are to be congratulated on the
results of the energy and patience which you have bestowed upon its
preparation. You have a true reward in the support of writers so varied
and conspicuous in distinction as those whose names you have been able
to bring together.

You are enabling the whole reading world to judge for itself, how the
subject of ‘Spiritual,’ ‘Mental,’ or ‘Faith’ healing, which during
the past ten years has forced itself upon public notice, is being
regarded by able, thoughtful, and impartial minds. There is no
doubt that scientific medical men are not going to pay attention to
evidence of an unscientific character. They will not waste their time
over it. Nevertheless, to phenomena duly attested, and to evidence
scientifically recorded, they will give the most scrupulous attention.
It is the detailed and accurate collection and classification of facts
by those who are trained for the task and expert in its process, that
must precede generalisations upon this new, or shall we call it,
revived, branch of therapeutics.

Prejudice against it will be found to exist both in ecclesiastic and
in scientific circles. Your book will help to dissipate prejudice by
the spread of better-informed opinion. The time, indeed, is opportune.
The _British Medical Journal_ of June 18, 1910, has published a series
of papers by men ‘who could speak with the highest authority on the
relations between mind and body, as exhibited in the phenomena of
disease.’ ‘Their opinion,’ as the _Journal_ tells us, ‘serves as an
authoritative reminder that there are bodily ills which cannot be
cured by pills and potions, but which yield to methods which, for
want of a better word, may be called “mental”; that cures which, in
a former day, would have been denied by unbelievers and accepted as
miracles by the faithful, really happen, and that they can be explained
without invoking supernatural intervention.’ On the other hand, we
are confident the Church of Christ will never identify itself with
charlatan methods which might delude the poor and the ignorant into the
superstitious idea that they can be more cheaply and effectively healed
by a magic or thaumaturgic ministry, than by the knowledge and skill
of trained and certificated doctors and surgeons. To quote our report
in the Lambeth Conference of 1908, ‘Medical science is the handmaid of
God and His Church’ (N.B. not of His clergy, but of that Body of Christ
in which all true callings unite in serving), ‘and should be fully
recognised as the ordinary means appointed by Almighty God for the care
and healing of the human body.’

The temper of our age favours an inquiry conducted in a spirit which
will neither disregard the requirements of science, nor rule miracles
out of court as impossible. We need not be anxious as to the results.
It looks, indeed, as if science were only just now awaking to the
realisation of its possibilities through psychical treatment; and as
if the Church had never yet realised to the full its responsibility
and its power in ministration to sickness, and its influence over the
reason and the imagination.

‘Suspect everything,’ says St. Teresa, as quoted by Sir Clifford
Allbutt, ‘which weakens the use of our reason; for by such a way, we
shall never attain to the liberty of the Spirit.’ ‘Prayer,’ says the
_British Medical Journal_, in the article quoted above, ‘inspired by
a living faith, is a force acting within the patient, which places
him in the most favourable condition for the stirring of the pool of
hope that lies, still and hidden it may be, in the depths of human
nature.’ Truly, it is a tribute to the intellectual temper of our day
that two such quotations, the one from a medieval saint, the other from
a leading article in our modern medical journal, can appropriately
be adduced in illustration of the spirit in which you have edited
your volume. I trust it will have many readers. That it may promote
the wise and temperate study of spiritual and mental, as well as of
physical, forces and disorders, is my earnest hope and desire. That it
may also tend to correct shallow and superficial delusions on the part
of ignorant persons who imagine that they can dispense with scientific
knowledge, and ignore the facts of mortality in suffering, disease,
and death, is an expectation which I pray may be fulfilled.

Wishing, therefore, your volume all success,

  I am, dear Mr. Geoffrey Rhodes,
  Yours very sincerely,
  Herbert E. Winton.



EDITOR’S PREFACE


I have to acknowledge my indebtedness to a host of kind people for help
in compiling this book. First of all to the many clergymen and doctors
who assisted me in finding suitable contributors for the different
chapters, and then no less to the contributors themselves who, in spite
of the exigencies of professional duties, managed not only to write
for these pages but to take part in many editorial discussions often
entailing lengthy interviews and correspondence.

The Bishop of Winchester’s work in connexion with this book has not
been confined to the Foreword which appears under his name. I have had
the benefit of his Lordship’s advice and help throughout, and he has
spared the time to read all the essays in manuscript.

My thanks are also due to Sir Thomas Barlow and Sir Clifford Allbutt
for assistance in reading the proofs of the medical chapters.

Messrs. Macmillan and the Editors of the _Hibbert Journal_ and the
_British Medical Journal_ have kindly allowed me to make extracts.

  G. R.



CONTENTS


                                                                PAGE

  FOREWORD                                                         v
      By THE LORD BISHOP OF WINCHESTER.

  EDITOR’S PREFACE                                                xi

  INTRODUCTION:

    PART I.                                                        3

    PART II.                                                      31

        1. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MEDICINE AND RELIGION         33

      By SIR T. CLIFFORD ALLBUTT, K.C.B., M.D., LL.D., F.R.S.,
      Regius Professor of Physic at the University of Cambridge.

        2. RELIGION AND MEDICINE IN THE HOSPITAL                  43
      By Hon. SYDNEY HOLLAND, Chairman of the London
      Hospital.

        3. THE SURGEON, THE CLERGYMAN, AND THE PATIENT            45
      By F.R.C.S.

  MEDICINE AND RELIGION                                           51
      By CHARLES BUTTAR, M.D., Sometime President of the
      Harveian Society.

  THE PATIENT                                                     69
      By STEPHEN PAGET, F.R.C.S.

  THE RELATION OF PRIEST AND DOCTOR TO PATIENT                    81
      By JANE WALKER, M.D., Physician, New Hospital for
      Women.

  FAITH AND MENTAL INSTABILITY                                   103
      By THEO. B. HYSLOP, M.D., Superintendent of Bethlem
      Hospital.

  MEDICAL ASPECTS OF MENTAL HEALING                              117
      By H. G. G. MACKENZIE, M.A., M.B.

  OUR LORD’S ATTITUDE TOWARDS SICKNESS                           175
      By W. YORKE FAUSSET, M.A., Vicar of Cheddar and
      Prebendary of Wells.

  THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN CHRISTIAN HEALING                     205
      By W. YORKE FAUSSET, M.A., Vicar of Cheddar and
      Prebendary of Wells.

  THE CHURCH AND MENTAL HEALING                                  227
      By ELLIS ROBERTS.

  THE EUCHARIST AND BODILY WELL-BEING                            245
      By ARTHUR W. ROBINSON, D.D., Vicar of All Hallows
      Barking, Examining Chaplain to the Bishop of
      London, and Rural Dean of the East City of London.

  PRAYER AND MENTAL HEALING                                      269
      By ARTHUR CHANDLER, D.D., Bishop of Bloemfontein.

  THE METAPHYSICS OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE                           289
      By M. CARTA STURGE.



INTRODUCTION

PART I



MEDICINE AND THE CHURCH



INTRODUCTION

I


In the Middle Ages practically the only homes of learning were the
monasteries. Here all the knowledge of the time was taught and all
the studies carried on, so that under the same roof the theologian,
the chemist, the artist, and the artificer sat side by side, and
consequently each drew from and modified the study and practice of
the other. In England, at least, the dissolution of the monasteries
changed this order, and though the brilliancy of the Renaissance for a
time obscured the loss to society in general, in the backwater of the
eighteenth century both religion and medicine drifted into distinct
circumscribed professions. The dawn of the nineteenth century saw an
enormous revival of interest and study in both directions, but the
newfound energy with which the two spheres of learning were pushed
forward, proved in the end inimical to the highest interests of the
community, for religion and medicine found themselves carried farther
and farther apart.

Before the stress of life became as severe as it is to-day, most common
complaints could be overcome by rest and ordinary treatment. But under
modern conditions of extreme complexity healing can no longer be
conducted on such simple lines, and as time has gone on the effects of
this divorce of medicine and religion have made themselves felt.

In correspondence with a more highly organised state of society, man
has become a more highly organised being. He has developed faculties
in excess of the man of, say, fifty years ago, and the exercise of
these faculties, that depend for their operation on the nervous
system, entails a strain on that system to which it was not exposed
half a century back. The more elaborate the machinery the more ways in
which it may get out of order. Man to-day is prone to a dozen nervous
complaints whose existence our forefathers were happily able to ignore.
Owing to climatic and other conditions that need not be discussed here,
these nervous disorders first forced themselves on public attention in
the United States of America. The overworked business or professional
man has no time in the rushing life of the great growing cities of
America for rest. Carried off his feet by the tide of prosperity, he
becomes the slave of his inventions instead of being their master.
His sense of proportion becomes atrophied and he fails to maintain a
correct balance between thought and action. A purely materialistic
medicine that ignores thoughts and feelings as being outside the scope
of diagnosis is powerless to prescribe for such a case. And it is small
matter for astonishment that patients of this description have been
drifting into the hands of Christian Science and kindred cults in their
search for relief. These systems of philosophy or religion (if such
they can be called) lack, however, that element of completeness without
which no guide of human conduct can maintain its hold. And as it
becomes realised that these irresponsible and often mercenary societies
are propagating views diametrically opposed to the common-sense
conceptions of the patients, their power will be broken and the cures
cease. Meantime Christian Science undoubtedly does overcome some cases
of nervous trouble, but these in no sense outweigh the mischief done
by its followers in denying the sick medical care. We must clear the
ground before we can commence building, and it may be well to examine
briefly the ‘faith and works’ of Christian Science before proceeding to
discuss the relationship between Medicine and the Church.

Opening Mrs. Eddy’s handbook at random we come across these two
explanatory statements:

(1) It is not scientific to examine the body in order to ascertain if
we are in health.

(2) To employ drugs for the cure of disease shows a lack of faith in
God.

There is nothing new, of course, in these two statements, nor anything
peculiar to Christian Science in them. They are put forward by the
majority of persons with these views, whether they belong to the
Peculiar People or to Christian Science.

With Christian Science, as with all these unorthodox and irregular
religious healing societies, it is almost impossible to find any matter
that is sufficiently definite to enable one to form any conclusion of
their objects. They talk glibly about having effected cures of various
kinds of diseases, but on their own showing there is absolutely no
evidence to prove that the individual ever had that disease or any
other form of disease. Mr. Stephen Paget has very kindly allowed me
to make one or two extracts from his invaluable work dealing with
Christian Science. He has, at great pains, collected cases of Christian
Science cures as reported in their own official publications. It is
only necessary to read a few of these to see the absolute hopelessness
of getting at the bottom of them, not merely from a medical standpoint
but from the point of view of common sense. I would ask any person of
average intelligence to read the following five testimonies to healing
that Mr. Stephen Paget extracted from Mrs. Eddy’s weekly journal,
the _Christian Science Sentinel_, and inform me if they convey any
impression whatsoever to his or her mind:

‘_Mrs. R._--Healed of “sense of fatigue, and throat trouble.” Also,
when knocked down by a bicyclist, she “suffered no pain at all, and had
little sense of shock.”’

‘_Mrs. E._--Was healed of the pain of a burn. “The healing went on
rapidly, and in a very short time all manifestation of the trouble
disappeared.”’

‘_Mr. W._--Cured of drinking and smoking, and of “stomach and throat
trouble.”’[1]

  [1] A good case of a drunkard converted. The healing of the stomach
  and throat troubles, of course, followed the giving-up of the drink.

‘_Mamie D._--“I seemed to have burned my hand very badly.” Healed.’

‘_Mrs. P._--“Many physical ailments have been met and overcome by
Truth.”’

And yet if they will refer to Mr. Paget’s book they will find hundreds
of similar instances. In an appendix to the second edition of his work
Mr. Paget quotes the whole of the correspondence in connexion with the
absent treatment of the Hon. A. Holland-Hibbert’s mare, in 1900. This
curious correspondence needs no comment.

The following is an account _in extenso_ of an alleged cure by
Christian Science taken from an article in the _Twentieth Century
Magazine_, published in Boston, U.S.A., October 1909.

The contribution in question is from the pen of the editor, Mr. B. O.
Flower. I leave my readers to form their own opinion on this remarkable
testimony.

‘On the morning of the dedication of the Chicago Church, November 14,
1898, I was in my bedroom in the third story of our house (the house is
three stories and basement). I was getting ready to go to the morning
service, and my little daughter, five years old, was playing about,
when suddenly I felt a silence. I instantly noticed that the child was
no longer there and that the window was open.’

‘I looked out and saw her unconscious form on the ground below, her
head on the cement sidewalk. Instantly I thought, “All is Love.”

‘As I went downstairs the entire paragraph in “No and Yes,” page 19,
beginning, “Eternal harmony, perpetuity, and perfection constitute
the phenomena of Being,” came to me and took up its abode with me,
and with it the clear sense of the great gulf fixed between the child
and the lie that claimed to destroy. The child was brought in, and
as she was carried upstairs she cried. As she was laid down, the
blood was spurting from her mouth, and had already covered her neck
and shoulders. I instantly said, “There is one law--God’s law--under
which man remains perfect,” and the bleeding immediately stopped. The
child seemed to relapse into unconsciousness, but I declared, “Mind
is ever present and controls its idea,” and in a few moments she
slept naturally. During the morning she seemed to suffer greatly if
she was moved at all, and her legs seemed paralysed, lifeless. In the
afternoon, all sense of pain left, she slept quietly, and I went to the
afternoon service rejoicing greatly in my freedom from the sense of
personal responsibility.’

‘When I returned she sat in my lap to eat some supper, with no sense
of pain, but still unable to control her limbs, which presented the
appearance of entire inaction. At eight o’clock she was undressed
without inconvenience, and there was no mark on her body but a bruised
eye. During the day she had not spoken of herself. At eleven o’clock
when I went upstairs, I found her wide awake and she said: “Mamma,
error is trying to say that I fell out of the window, but that cannot
be. The child of God can’t fall; but why do I lie here? Why can’t I
move my legs?”

‘The answer was, “You can move them. Mind governs, and you are always
perfect.” In a moment she said, “I will get up and walk.” It seemed to
require one or two trials to get her legs to obey, but she rose, walked
across the room and back and climbed into bed.... She then sat up, ate
a lunch, fell into a natural slumber, and woke bright and happy in the
morning.’

The Archbishop of Canterbury gave a solemn warning in connexion with
this question at a recent conference at Lambeth Palace, and the
following statement from the medical side is important.

‘Christian Science seems to present one fundamental point of difference
from all other forms of spiritual healing. This is, that whereas the
cures said to be wrought at Lourdes and other shrines are attributed
to the direct action of Christ, exercised at the intercession of His
Virgin Mother or His Saints, Mrs. Eddy and her disciples claim, as far
as we understand the teaching--which is not only obscure in itself, but
often inconsistent--to cure disease by the same power of healing that
was given to Christ. In the sacred book of the sect we read:

‘Our Master healed the sick, practised Christian healing, and taught
the generalities of its divine Principle to His students; but He
left no definite rule for demonstrating His Principle of healing and
preventing disease. This remained to be discovered through Christian
Science. A pure affection takes form in goodness, but Science alone
reveals its Principle and demonstrates its rules.’[2]

  [2] _Science and Health._ By Mary Baker G. Eddy. Boston. 1908. P. 41.

She tells us that ‘when God called her to proclaim His Gospel to this
age, there came also the charge to plant and water His vineyard.’
What she calls her ‘sacred discovery’ was made in 1866, and since
then it has become widespread in America and in this country. It does
not commend itself to the Latin mind, which is nothing if not lucid
and logical. Its methods and results are fully discussed by some
representatives of the most advanced medical thought in the present
issue of the _Journal_, and we have nothing to add to what they say.
To anyone who wishes to see the whole case against Christian Science
put most clearly and convincingly from the medical point of view, we
cordially recommend Mr. Stephen Paget’s book on the subject.[3] It is
attractively written, well ‘documented,’ and informed with the true
scientific spirit.

  [3] _The Faith and Works of Christian Science._ Macmillan and Co.
  1909. The book is now in a second edition.

We need say only one thing more about Christian Science, which, to
speak plainly, is a repulsive subject, inasmuch as it shows, in a way
no other form of spiritual healing does, the depths of degradation
to which the human mind can sink under the weight of superstition.
That it cures cases of the kind that have been healed at all sorts of
shrines--pagan, Christian, Buddhist, Mohammedan--from time immemorial,
it would be idle to deny. That it brightens the lives of some persons
who have no aim in life, and have nothing to do but evoke pains and
ailments by thinking of their health, is also true. But, none the less,
its pretensions go far behind anything that is credible, except by
such as accept Tertullian’s paradox, _Credo quia impossibile_; and,
instead of courting the light as other methods do, it seems to love
the darkness. We have asked over and over again for facts that would
convince a trained mind, but none are forthcoming. Christian Science
may, indeed, be described as faith with the least possible amount of
works and the largest possible number of words. Here are fair specimens
of the kind of facts which forms all the evidence vouchsafed to us
of its healing efficacy; they are taken from the _Christian Science
Sentinel_ of May 28, 1910, p. 777:

‘A short time ago I was taken sick with fever. My mother asked for
Christian Science treatment for me, and I was almost instantly cured.
I have been reading “Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures,”
by Mrs. Eddy, and have been benefited in business and in health ever
since. I am very grateful for Christian Science, and thankful to God,
whence all good comes.

  ‘FRED. WERTH, Dallas, Tex.’

‘Some time ago I was attacked by stomach and bowel trouble. A Christian
Science practitioner was called, and my ailment soon left and I was
again able to resume my duties. I am very thankful for the good done me
and others, and praise God for speaking to us through Mrs. Eddy.

  ‘TILLIE WERTH, Dallas, Tex.’

There is nothing new in Christian Science except the colossal impudence
of its pretensions. Mark Twain spoke in ignorance when he said:

‘The Christian Scientist has taken a force which has been lying idle in
every member of the human race since time began.’

We have shown that it was not left to Mrs. Eddy to discover this force,
and that, so far from lying idle, it has been active in temples and
churches, at shrines and tombs, for thousands of years. In one thing
Christian Science has probably a unique record of achievement: beyond
any sect or system that we know of it has succeeded in exploiting human
imbecility and turning airy nothing into solid cash.[4]

  [4] _British Medical Journal_, June 18, 1910.

‘Every false system of philosophy, of ethics, of morals, and of
religion is floated on the vast ocean of conduct, of character, and of
conviction by some element of truth. This corresponds to a water-tight
compartment in a vessel which is in danger of being sunk, through
dishonest contracts, imperfect mechanism, ignorant seamanship, or the
stress and strain of storm. But for this compartment, the ship would
disappear in the gurgling green of the ocean. In the moral Order, and
in all our controversies, there is this unsinkable truth. It keeps
afloat all with which it is for the time united, until the balance is
lost. Then the system is submerged. But the truth sails on.’[5] In the
case of the system we have had under examination this truth is the
power of the mind over the body and the efficacy of faith. Christian
Science undoubtedly cures certain kinds of neurotic troubles, just as
it may do incalculable harm by teaching that scientific medicine is
not only useless but mischievous. If its followers confined themselves
to merely enunciating the truth on which the flimsy superstructure is
founded little could be urged against them. As we have seen, however,
by a careful examination of their official records, they contradict the
cardinal doctrines of the Christian Churches, and encourage a disregard
for all bodily complaints that is not merely foolish in the extreme,
but where the sufferings of others are concerned, distinctly brutal,
and in either case often leads to the most disastrous results.

  [5] Dean Lefroy on _Christian Science_.

This indictment is a serious one. But then the claims of Mrs. Eddy’s
supporters are so portentous that they cannot be lightly dismissed,
and we must not forget that, as the Bishop of Birmingham points out in
a letter printed further on in this volume, both the Church and the
medical profession have played into the hands of Christian Science by
ignoring the facts that Mrs. Eddy has been occupied in distorting.

However much it may have been possible in the past for the doctor and
the parson in dealing with the less nervous, more easy-going type to
look upon him as composed of two distinct and separate parts, body
and spirit respectively, having no intimate relationship and amenable
to quite different influences, such a view of men and women is to-day
out of the question. To entertain it for a moment is to court failure.
Mind and matter act and react upon one another, and more than this,
without faith all human enterprise would be stultified. Faith plays no
less important a part in medical treatment than it does in the more
commonplace affairs of life. This aspect of the question cannot be
better expressed than it has been recently by Professor Osler.[6]

  [6]

  ‘_From the Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford._

  ‘_Nov. 18th, ’09._

  ‘Dear Sir,--

  ‘The question as you say bristles with difficulties, but no doubt
  in the stirring of the pool healing in some form or another will be
  the outcome. You are of course at liberty to use any writings of
  mine.--Sincerely yours,

  W. Osler.’


‘Nothing in life is more wonderful than faith--the one great moving
force which we can neither weigh in the balance nor test in the
crucible. Intangible as the ether, ineluctable as gravitation, the
radium of the moral and mental spheres, mysterious, indefinable,
known only by its effects, faith pours out an unfailing stream of
energy while abating nor jot nor tittle of its potency. Well indeed
did St. Paul break out into the well-known glorious panegyric, but
even this scarcely does justice to the Hertha of the psychical world,
distributing force as from a great storage battery, without money and
without price to the children of men.’

Three of its relations concern us here. The most active manifestations
are in the countless affiliations which man in his evolution has worked
out with the unseen, with the invisible powers, whether of light or
of darkness, to which from time immemorial he has erected altars and
shrines. To each one of the religions, past or present, faith has been
the Jacob’s ladder. Creeds pass; an inexhaustible supply of faith
remains, with which man proceeds to rebuild temples, churches, chapels,
and shrines. As Swinburne says in that wonderful poem, _The Altar of
Righteousness_:

  God by God flits past in thunder, till his glories turn to shades:
  God to God bears wondering witness how his gospel flames and fades.
  More was each of these, while yet they were, than man their servant seemed:
  Dead are all of these, and man survives who made them while he dreamed.

And all this has been done by faith, and faith alone. Christendom lives
on it, and countless thousands are happy in the possession of that most
touching of all confessions, ‘Lord! I believe; help Thou my unbelief.’
But, with its Greek infection, the Western mind is a poor transmitter
of faith, the apotheosis of which must be sought in the religions of
the East. The nemesis of faith is that neither in its intensity nor in
its effects does man find any warrant of the worthiness of the object
on which it is lavished--the followers of Joe Smith, the Mormon, are as
earnest and believing as are those of Confucius!

Again, faith is the cement which binds man to man in every relation
of life. Without faith in the Editor of the _Journal_ I would not
have accepted his invitation to write this brief note, and he had
confidence that I would not write rubbish. Personally I have battened
on it these thirty-six years, ever since the McGill Medical Faculty
gave me my first mount. I have had faith in the profession, the most
unbounded confidence in it as one of the great factors in the progress
of humanity; and one of the special satisfactions of my life has been
that my brethren have in many practical ways shown faith in me, often
much more than (as I know in my heart of hearts) I have deserved. I
take this illustration of the practical value of the faith that worketh
confidence, but there is not a human relationship which could not be
used for the same purpose.

And a third aspect is one of very great importance to the question in
hand--a man must have faith in himself to be of any use in the world.
There may be very little on which to base it--no matter, but faith in
one’s powers, in one’s mission, is essential to success. Confidence
once won, the rest follows naturally; and with a strong faith in
himself a man becomes a local centre for its radiation. St. Francis,
St. Theresa, Ignatius Loyola, Florence Nightingale, the originator of
every cult or sect or profession, has possessed this infective faith.
And in the ordinary everyday work of the doctor, confidence, assurance
(in the proper sense of the word) is an asset without which it is
very difficult to succeed. How often does one hear the remark, ‘Oh!
he does not inspire confidence,’ or the reverse! How true it is, as
wise old Burton says: ‘That the patient must have a sure hope in his
physician. Damascen, the Arabian, requires likewise in the physician
himself that he be confident he can cure him, otherwise his physic will
not be effectual, and promise withal that he will certainly help him,
make him believe so at least. Galeottus gives this reason because
the form of health is contained in the physician’s mind, and as Galen
holds confidence and hope to be more good than physic, he cures most in
whom most are confident’; and he quotes Paracelsus to the effect that
Hippocrates was so fortunate in his cures not from any extraordinary
skill, but because ‘the common people had a most strong conceit of his
worth.’

Faith is indeed one of the miracles of human nature which science is
as ready to accept as it is to study its marvellous effects. When we
realise what a vast asset it has been in history, the part which it
has played in the healing art seems insignificant, and yet there is no
department of knowledge more favourable to an impartial study of its
effects; and this brings me to my subject--the faith that heals.

Apart from the more specific methods to be dealt with faith has always
been an essential factor in the practice of medicine, as illustrated by
the quotations just given from Burton. Literature is full of examples
of remarkable cures through the influence of the imagination, which
is only an active phase of faith. The late Daniel Hack Tuke’s book,
‘The Influence of the Mind on the Body,’ is a storehouse of facts
dealing with the subject. ‘While in general use for centuries, one
good result of the recent development of mental healing has been to
call attention to its great value as a measure to be carefully and
scientifically applied in suitable cases. My experience has been that
of the unconscious rather than the deliberate faith healer. Phenomenal,
even what could be called miraculous, cures are not very uncommon. Like
others, I have had cases any one of which, under suitable conditions,
could have been worthy of a shrine or made the germ of a pilgrimage.
For more than ten years a girl lay paralysed in a New Jersey town. A
devoted mother and loving sisters had worn out lives in her service.
She had never been out of bed unless when lifted by one of her
physicians, Dr. Longstreth and Dr. Shippen. The new surroundings of a
hospital, the positive assurance that she could get well with a few
simple measures sufficed, and within a fortnight she walked round
the hospital square. This is a type of modern miracle that makes one
appreciate how readily well-meaning people may be deceived as to the
true nature of the cure effected at the shrine of a saint. Who could
deny the miracle? And miracle it was, but not brought about by any
supernatural means.’[7]

  [7] _British Medical Journal_, June 18, 1910.

If, then, faith is so important an adjuvant to ordinary medical
treatment, we see at once that religion that stands for faith
in its highest and purest form should represent a tremendous
recuperative force. We have said that medicine and religion had become
estranged--the one given over to a rigid materialism, and the other so
busy with men’s souls that it forgot their bodies altogether. This book
is a humble attempt to bridge over the gulf. There is a great movement
that has its roots in history that is already written and that will go
on into the far distant future, around about us. It is a movement that
stands for Idealism and Optimism. It is the harmonising of all kinds
of human experience into one great philosophy. Scientific medicine is
coming to reconsider its position and to realise its responsibilities.
This synchronises with a broadening of the basis of Christian teaching.
Without abandoning any of the cardinal tenets of their faith, the
churches are coming to see that Christianity is a much more wonderful
truth than they had ever dreamed; and, instead of there being any
conflict between Christianity and science, science, like all work for
the good of humanity, must be an integral part of the Church’s service
to mankind.

Medicine and religion had a common origin in pagan temples, and we
have already seen that in medieval times all such learning was the
monopoly of the monks. Healing by means of influence on the mind of
the patient is no newer a branch of the art than surgery or treatment
by drugs. History abounds with instances of cures effected at shrines
by means of relics, and by saints. Of all modern pilgrimage shrines
the one in the Pyrenees is by far the most famous. That cures actually
take place at the Grotto of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception at
Lourdes is undeniable. The cases have been medically diagnosed and the
certificates may be examined in the Record Office at Lourdes where
such documents are preserved. Whether such cures differ in character
from other cures by what is termed suggestion is an open question. In
fairness to those who believe them to be due to the direct intervention
of the Almighty it is perhaps only right to give here the opinion
of Mr. Butlin, the President of the Royal College of Surgeons, who
recently said:

‘When such cures take place in the presence of vast masses of people,
although it may be possible to explain all the steps through which
the emotion has produced the “cure,” how can we be surprised that the
people fall on their knees before God and bless His holy name for the
miracle which He has wrought?

‘I defy anyone to read Zola’s story of the cure of Marie le Guersaint,
written by a sceptic (Zola’s “Lourdes”), without being moved by it and
without feeling convinced that all true Catholics who were present,
priests and people, with the unhappy exception of the Abbé Pierre
Froment, truly believed that Almighty God had been moved by the
intercession of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception to display His
divine power by instantaneously restoring the health of the poor girl
who had lain paralysed upon a couch for seven years. In the eyes of
all who witnessed it, it was a miracle, for every medical man who had
seen her had, with one exception, believed her to be suffering from
a damaged spinal cord. There is therefore no excuse, in such a case
as this or in ninety-nine out of one hundred cases which are cured by
faith, to impute dishonesty and deliberate deception to the priests
and the people who proclaim such cures to be the work of God. From the
little I have seen of the priests actively engaged in the grotto at
Lourdes, I can feel no doubt that the most of them honestly believe
that the cures which they have seen are genuine. I would no more think
of accusing them of deliberate deception than I would accuse my own
relative of it.’[8]

  [8] _British Medical Journal_, June 18, 1910.

We have spoken of a great movement, that tends to bring into closer
co-operation all human effort and to consecrate it to one ideal--the
service of mankind.

We are here more particularly concerned with a smaller movement
that exists within the greater. It has made itself felt at Church
Conferences and at Medical Councils. It is a movement to bring the
medical profession and the Church into a closer practical connexion to
fight disease. That such an intimate co-operation is not only desirable
but possible, the thoughtful chapters contributed to this book by
eminent authorities go to show. As regards the general principle
underlying this joint work for the sick, the Archdeacon of London
recently gave expression to what would appear to be the feeling of the
leading ecclesiastics and foremost physicians in his charge to the
clergy of his archdeaconry in the following words:

‘Religion and medical science should always co-operate, while the
ultimate responsibility must lie with the accredited physician.’

When the scheme for the present volume was drawn up over a year ago,
it was felt that some authoritative statement was needed to guide the
public in thinking out the topical questions of Spiritual Faith or
Mental Healing. There has, in recent years, been an endless series of
books issued from the European and American presses on this subject.
Some of these publications being obviously the hand-books of societies
whose name spelt their own condemnation, thinking people passed them
by, but, on the other hand, much literature of a very misleading
character has been placed on the market and purchased by many in the
belief that they were learning from it the official views either of the
Church or of the medical profession, or of both. The qualified medical
practitioners of this country do not lightly decide to give expression
to their views on therapeutics in books issued to the general public,
and whenever they circulate opinions it may be taken for granted that
they are the result of patient investigation of facts and of carefully
thought out conclusions deduced from those facts. If one may be allowed
to indicate in a general way the position taken up by the doctors who
have written for the following pages, it is one of scepticism towards
quasi-miraculous healing as a practical means of combating disease, but
at the same time it is an attitude of extreme cordiality towards the
minister of religion--in his capacity as a messenger of hope and expert
in peace of mind. Of all the weighty evidence that has been gathered
together to build up this book, the opinion of Sir Clifford Allbutt
forms no unimportant section. Few of us can escape sickness altogether,
and although some illnesses may be blessings in disguise, nevertheless
our desire for health is only second to our desire for life, and it
is right that it should be so. ‘The highest spiritual life depends on
the best bodily health,’ Sir Clifford Allbutt tells us. The Bishops at
Lambeth admitted with regret that ‘sickness has too often exclusively
been regarded as a cross to be borne with passive resignation, whereas
it should have been regarded rather as a weakness to be overcome by the
power of the spirit.’ That there exist potentialities of healing apart
from physic to-day no one can refute, but it is to be feared the Church
and the medical profession have much lost ground to recover, through
having in the past ignored those psychic forces that are now the object
both of scientific inquiry and of theological study. The marvellous
chemical discoveries of the past few years have revolutionised
scientific conceptions. New theories of matter and of energy are
being framed to explain the result of new researches. The wonders of
radio-activity have converted the scientist from a materialist who
believed in nothing unrevealed by test-tube or microscope, into an
idealist prepared to argue from the unseen to the seen. Just as there
are in the world of physical science forces whose existence we are only
now beginning to recognise and whose capabilities are still unknown
to us, there are undoubtedly psychic forces in man that are capable
of development, but of whose exact nature we at present are ignorant,
although we can trace their effects.[9]

  [9] The biologist who used to expect to discover the source of life
  by dissection and analysis would be rather astonished at the modern
  tendency among scientific men to substitute doctrines of ‘energies’
  for ‘atoms.’ As Dr. Putman has pointed out, the modern physicist
  scarcely feels the need of atoms for the world of his conception. We
  may even go a step further. ‘Energy’ is ‘immaterial,’ ‘consciousness’
  is ‘immaterial.’ May they not accordingly have a common denominator?

‘In the case of vital truth ... it may be necessary for a writer to
say some hard things,’ but criticism, prompted by no petty spirit,
but by a noble desire to bring out the best, will never be resented
by right-minded people. Two great and noble professions are about to
make a combined attack on sickness and suffering. They have too great a
sense of their responsibility to enter upon such a campaign lightly.
Much counsel is needed before the allies can give battle.

The respective spheres of action of the cleric and the doctor have to
be mapped out; so that all the efforts of the one may support and never
hamper the other.

It will be seen that the medical contributors, not unreasonably,
seriously deprecate any attempt on the part of the minister of religion
to invade the province of medicine. Such intrusion is none the less
dangerous because it may be unintentional. All ‘treatment,’ whether it
be by means of drugs, surgery, or hypnotic suggestion, must necessarily
be a matter for the doctor and those working under his immediate
direction: and for them only. In so far as he may be concerned with
physical disabilities the priest must inevitably defer to the physician.

At the same time the value of spiritual ministrations in sickness is
emphasised on every page of this book.

‘Probably no limb, no viscus is so far a vessel of dishonour as to lie
wholly outside the renewals of the spirit,’ says Sir Clifford Allbutt.
But we may go further than this in certain directions. Remembering
that the health of mind and body are mutually dependent, and that
troublesome thoughts may bring sickness in their train, we see that
there may exist sicknesses that are not amenable to medical treatment
only. These are among the ills that the _British Medical Journal_ has
told us cannot be cured by pills and potions alone.

Dr. Jane Walker writes pertinently on this, under the heading of ‘The
Relationship of Priest and Doctor to Patient.’ As she points out, when
a character has to be remoulded, it is the priest rather than the
doctor who can best help the patient.

‘A true and philosophic religion raises the mind above incidental
emotionalism and gives stability,’ says Dr. Hyslop: this is the
stand-point adopted by all the eminent theologians who have written for
this book.

Mental and physical pain is part of the evil in the world. It makes
a great difference, however--it may be all the difference between
sickness and health--whether we allow trouble to break down our
self-control and weaken our will, or whether we face it boldly with a
supreme serenity of spirit, strong in a knowledge of greater things.



INTRODUCTION

PART II



INTRODUCTION

II


In the course of gathering opinions from various authoritative sources
on the subject dealt with in this book, I received communications
from Sir Clifford Allbutt, the Hon. Sydney Holland, and a well-known
surgeon, which, though they do not constitute separate treatises, are
so important, not only in view of the distinction of the authors, but
of the broad survey of the subject that they afford, that I venture to
print them as part of the general introduction.

In the case of Sir Clifford Allbutt’s paper I have supplemented it by
an important extract from one of his recent writings.


THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MEDICINE AND RELIGION

The response you are good enough to desire can be but brief, crude,
and, I fear, too blunt; but I have not time for careful consideration.
I can only indicate a few points which occur to me offhand, and taking
much for granted. For instance, I must avoid any discussion of those
antinomies which meet us at every side of human conceptions, and be
content to accept the common uses. The chief of these (for the moment)
is that of the material and spiritual; without forgetting that they
melt at their borders the one into the other, and that we meet with
corresponding ambiguities, yet I must take them as distinct fields of
human life. In our interesting personal conversation you may remember
that I expressed the opinion that, on the whole, our prayers must not
be for material but for spiritual things. And, speaking on the whole,
sickness is a material thing. In the stories of our Lord’s miracles
it has always struck me that He regarded His miracles--I must use the
word for brevity--apologetically. The disciples were not to tell any
man of them; or again, a miracle was performed under a compelling sense
of the overwhelming faith of the pleader, which was the main thing.
Faith, prayer, were to be for the needs of the soul, not of the body.
For instance, the father seeing his child in diphtheria would please
God better--so the experience of His world tells us--by spending his
first hour in seeking the physician with his antidote rather than
in prayer for a divine intervention. And when time came for prayer
he would pray not for a suspension of natural law but for unity of
his own will with that of the Father, and for the child’s spiritual
welfare. Into the origin of evil do not fear that I shall enter; it
is one of the antinomies which I have said that we must avoid, at any
rate at present: I can only now say that disease is a material effect
to be combated by material means, and not by religious processions or
intercessions.

This being my view, I would try to eliminate notions of the priest as
medicine man; they are essentially pagan, though to this day they more
or less unconsciously influence our thoughts on the present subject.

But, it may be said, strange healings do take place under religious
influences; and this is true. And at no time in history were such
miraculous cures more frequent and wonderful than in the temples of
Aesculapius or of Serapis. Modern cures, whether of the Eddyites or at
Lourdes, or the like elsewhere, when compared with those of the Roman
Empire fall into insignificance. Now a careful study of all reported
cures of this miraculous or miraculoid kind, a study illustrated for
us many years ago by Charcot, proved to him, and proves to the expert
observers of to-day, that they all--palsies, convulsions and the rest,
often inveterate cases--are and have been cures of one disease, and of
one only, namely hysteria; a malady which in its protean manifestations
mocks all and any particular diseases. I say this of the genuine
cases; but the majority of such wonders recorded turn out on inquiry
(like the ‘Grimsby’ case) to be grossly exaggerated or wholly false.
The ‘miraculous cures’ then, so far as they are genuine, are cures
by suggestion: they take their place with cures of the same kind of
disorder by panic, such as an alarm of fire; by ‘hypnotism,’ or by
any other over-mastering impression which startles or transports the
balance of the bodily functions from one centre of equilibrium to
another higher and more stable one.

So much for the ‘miracles’; which owe nothing to any sacerdotal magic,
and to the physician are part of a familiar experience, and of a
familiar interpretation. But giving up the hysterical cases--which,
by the way, is to give up a good deal--and admitting that disease is
in the body a material thing, and one not properly matter for the
pleading of prayer, except in the spiritual sense of submission to
the Divine order, between these positions is there a sphere in which
spiritual influences--whether by a clergyman or a Biblewoman or a
gentle friend--may so infuse peace and confidence into a sick man as
to promote even in the body a renewal, a conversion, or an economy of
energy which should make for recovery? Certainly; and here, I think, is
the restricted, if still important, sphere of religion as medical.

To consider this aspect of the matter we must go back for a moment to
certain principles. From the letters of Teresa--that noble saint--we
may learn much of the greatest value to us in the present inquiry.
We may learn from her to distrust the ‘ecstasies and melancholies’
which--as she said--were ‘the perils of conventual life’; she roundly
denounced all that ‘letting one’s self go, outside the control of
reason,’ which has its origin in ‘sick brains.’

‘If I were with you,’ she wrote to a certain Prioress, ‘you would
not have so many extraordinary experiences.’ Now Teresa not only
apprehended, but thoroughly understood, that the highest spiritual life
depends upon the best bodily health. She tells us that she supported
her own vigils with plenty of meat (_viande_) and sleep. High and
holy thought demands the greatest effort of the healthiest body, of
the brain most finely balanced and best nourished. The piety of the
sick-bed is at best a passive piety, which on recovery is pushed aside
again by the custom of the world; but herein it is that in sickness
the soul flags and droops upon itself, and that the support of other
sympathy is more precious. The sympathy we all depend on in health we
need most when enfeebled by ailment. There is no delusion more terrible
than that which lets a man run up a score of sins and negligences to be
repented of under the discouragement of a sick-bed. In this melancholy,
this debility, this disappointment, perhaps this remorse, energy is
wasted which is sorely required for the conflict with disease. And even
the man of religious life likewise--if in less degree, as one who has
accumulated more inward light--is also disheartened to perceive that
the fountains of spiritual contemplation are then less copious, and
aspiration a wearier effort. He too needs help, if not to make, yet
to reinforce, the happier conversations of his fuller life. In health
the mind in solitude droops and wastes, and the sick-bed is a kind
of solitude; the thousand and one stimulating impressions of common
life cease, the impressions wane which should keep the mind and soul
awake, and fill the wells of energy. On the sick-bed, therefore,
short times of encouragement and sympathy, periods not long enough to
exhaust the scanty stores of energy, are precious; and if the physician
be jealous--as it has been said--of the priest, it is lest he should
expend these stores more in priestly functions than in ‘angels’ visits’
of love and hope which would unite and reinforce the vacillating and
fading forces. Thus also prayer at the bedside and the short communions
should be of love and hope, not particular requests for material relief
or cure. The kindly physician himself may be a vehicle of much of this
encouragement; but--as I said to you before--he should avoid even the
semblance of attending to anything beside his own business of material
aid and general human sympathy. The most pious patient, openly or
inwardly, resents the divided mind. The instinct of self-preservation
is not lost even in those nearest to God.

So when all is said and done on this subject I fear that matters for
me remain much where they were before; but they may lead to a more
intimate understanding of the several parts of the spiritual and
the medical visitors, and to a completer sympathy between them. If
still it be urged that an imposing ceremony may, by a measure of the
‘suggestion’ so effective in the many-coloured hysteria, come to our
aid in more noxious maladies, if no more than on the fringe of them, I
should repeat that the advantage would be so indefinite, so relatively
small, and so well to be attained by ordinary spiritual visitation, as
not to be worth the peril of the moral perversion which hangs only too
closely around these good intentions, the peril of imposing upon, even
of bamboozling, the patient. We must remember the saying of Lavoisier,
‘Medicine came into the world with a twin brother, called charlatanism.’

  Clifford Allbutt.

       *       *       *       *       *

Extract from Sir Clifford Allbutt’s paper in the _British Medical
Journal_, June 18, 1910:

‘Spiritual gifts may or may not consist in the insertion of a new
entity, they certainly do consist in a reanimation and remodelling of
thinking matter in the uppermost strands of the brain, and probably of
some other, perhaps even of all the other, molecular activities of the
body. Probably no limb, no viscus is so far a vessel of dishonour as
to lie wholly outside the renewals of the spirit; and to an infinite
intelligence every accession of spiritual life would be apparent
in a new harmony (συγγυμνασία) of each and all of the metabolic
streams and confluences of the body. On this conviction it is that
the hopes and methods of faith healing depend. Conversely, every man
who watches his own life must know this, as in time of weariness
or pain he grieves over the drooping of his soul, that the highest
spiritual life depends on the highest bodily health; but this health
means, not health only of the belly, not only health of the heart
and common brain, but also of the rarest and most exquisite textures
of the cerebral web. If in a rude health of the grosser body these
subtlest parts have not been exercised and cherished, the total harmony
is diminished; highly efficient as, on lower planes, the particular
body may be, it is defective in comprehensions, it is an inconsummate
body. To this “materialism” of the body, even on its most spiritual
planes of structure, we must not close our eyes lest in our search
beyond knowledge we walk contrary to knowledge. “To pray well,” said
the noble Teresa, “one must eat well and sleep well.” If into the last
analysis the Pauline division between the carnal and the spiritual
cannot be carried, if under the relations of other times and of other
ideas we have to re-interpret it, yet still in its broader contrasts
it points out a plain way of life and conduct--one so plain that the
perplexities of the middle terms may be left to the casuist.

‘It must be granted then, in respect of faith healing, that spiritual
influences, divine directly, or indirectly through human mediation,
may to some unknown power radiate from these highest currents downward
through the more and more “material” planes, arousing them less and
less as they have become more and more statical in order.

‘Once more; it is said that in his “subliminal self” man possesses a
substance peculiarly divine, or a substance or means through which
we may reach divine communion, or through which especially divine
purposes may be fulfilled in us. It is true that we do not know even
approximately the content of the individual man, the materials racially
and personally acquired, the products of past experience, racial and
personal, built sensibly and insensibly into his personality. May we
not each of us be compared with a ship which began its voyage with no
inconsiderable rudimentary equipment, then, calling at many a port, has
gathered many kinds of stores and treasure? Of some of these stores, of
some variety of them, the supercargo has a recollection, especially of
those in frequent use; but, for the most part, the bills of lading had
been lost. Unlike a cargo, however, these contents are not a passive
burden, but a system of coefficients; some on planes which we commonly
call material, some on spiritual planes, some working on the surface,
some working stealthily within; so that much tact and insight are
necessary to unveil and to re-animate those agencies in whose abeyance
disorder or ineffectualness may happen to consist. And the influences
which are to effect these revivals must be akin in nature to these
kinds respectively; some must be solidly material--such as splints
or drugs--some must be religious, moral, and even intellectual, yet
inspired by emotion, by appeal to hope and joy; and their instruments
must be devotion, sympathy, gladness, reasonable persuasion, and even
surprise.’


RELIGION AND MEDICINE IN THE HOSPITAL

No one who has been connected with one of our big general hospitals
can doubt for a moment the advisability of the collaboration of the
physician and the clergyman, each helping the patient from his own
standpoint. It must not be imagined that I advocate any usurping of
the duties of one by the other, but in the cure of certain types of
disease, and certainly in the cure of diseases that are primarily
diseases of mind or character, the doctor should welcome the minister
of religion as a valuable ally. In fact none can doubt that the
minister of religion can bring a power to bear on the mind of a
patient, which the doctor cannot.

Whatever his own personal belief may be, the medical man can of course
only view religion from a philosophic or ethical stand-point. It is
difficult for him to concern himself with dogma. The clergyman can
help by administering suggestions of hope and encouragement. These
suggestions can and do often come from other sources with equal
results, but I think by virtue of his office the clergyman is specially
qualified for the work.

There can be no doubt that cures of certain kinds of diseases have
been effected by Christian Science and kindred faith-healing cults,
all of which cures come under the head of healing by suggestion. I do
not think that healing disease by suggestion is specially a Christian
work, it can be achieved in many ways. But I think the average medical
man likely to be more willing to seek the aid of a duly accredited
minister of religion than a so-called ‘Spiritual Healer’ who is subject
to no authority. But above and beyond all this I think the quieting
and encouraging influences of religion are of the greatest value in all
illness, and I believe a greater use might be made of such power.

  Sydney Holland.


THE SURGEON, THE CLERGYMAN, AND THE PATIENT

Possibly the gravest shock that a human being may receive, so far as
it concerns himself or herself, is to be told that fatal disease is
present in the system. So great may be the actual shock that many a
medical practitioner shrinks from inflicting it, and purposely avoids
direct allusion to the certainty of dissolution. Whether this is
justifiable or no, depends very largely upon the susceptibilities of
the patient and the tact of the doctor. But the word ‘operation’ is, by
some, almost as much dreaded as the word ‘death’; in fact even more,
as it always implies to the lay mind the infliction of hours of pain,
and days of discomfort, though this is far from being the truth in most
instances.

‘Rather let me die than make me undergo an operation’ is the not
infrequent remark of the highly-strung sufferer. And then comes in all
the sympathy, tact, and good breeding of the surgeon. He will gently
explain matters, will show how the disease is such that nothing short
of removal of the growth holds out the least chance of life or the
avoidance of later severe pain, and will state, what is the truth,
that the operation, short and sharp, will give years of freedom from
suffering even if it does not completely remove all trace of the
trouble. How bewildered the patient will feel! He has been hoping
against hope that his malady is only a slight one, and that it may be
‘dispersed’ by some magic of physic, and now his hopes have been rudely
mocked and shattered. Surely here, if ever, help from an outside source
is needed and should be welcomed. But such help must be rational, based
on truth, and fearing not the consequences.

Supposing the disease is cancer, what awaits him if the sufferer flies
to the quack and is befooled till all hope of successful treatment
is gone? Or rushes to the Christian Scientist, who, with seeming
_bona fides_, avers there is no such thing as a cancer cell! The
eye that has seen it a hundred times under the microscope, and can
recognise it amongst a hundred other varieties, does not exist in the
purblind conception of such a ‘Scientist,’ for the cell is matter,
it cannot exist, and neither for the same reasoning, if consistency
is maintained, can the eye which sees the cell exist, for it also is
material.

And still as the growth increases there is the lurking certainty ever
protruding itself that after all the surgeon was right, and the days
are slipping by. Would that friends could be true and friends indeed,
and not in ignorance hinder these circumstances, not mere blind leaders
of the blind.

It is here if anywhere the enlightened clergyman and the surgeon may
join hands for the good of spirit and body. And then when a decision
has been arrived at calmly and deliberately, and the time of the
operation has been fixed, there is still work for both the minister
and the surgeon to do. A quiet talk and prayer the evening before the
ordeal, how it has often soothed the trembling soul, and invoked a
night of rest and refreshment, enabling the patient to meet the trials
of the morning calm, because mentally and physically there has been
repose.

And the surgeon with his cheering word, and the anæsthetist with his
quiet reassuring manner and conversation, both tend to allay any fresh
alarm at that which is perhaps the most trying moment of all--the
placing oneself unreservedly in the hands of the operator.

Surely, surely here is a period when the efforts of the spiritual are
to crown the success of the material.

And then, observe how the quiet and confidence, engendered by the
combined efforts of pastor and doctor, continue during convalescence,
causing that period to be shortened in many a case.

In a hundred different ways members of the two professions may work
hand in hand, but each should be able to mutually esteem the other and
give to each his proper place and function. They ought never to despise
one another, because they ought never to encroach on one another’s
province.

Till the clergyman recognises that it is his duty to understand
something of elementary physiology, if he is going to be a benefactor
to spirit and body, and the medical practitioner is willing to admit
that there are spiritual forces which can be brought to help the
perfection of his work, so long is it the opinion of the writer that
the sufferer who looks to both of them for aid will fail to receive
his full due of assistance. May the time soon come when the rising
generation of all classes may be so taught at school, and in church,
that they will come to understand something of the composition and need
of the tripartite nature of man, and may the day speedily dawn when the
enlightened clerical and medical professions mutually work for the good
of the whole, spirit, soul and body.

  F.R.C.S.



MEDICINE AND RELIGION

BY

CHARLES BUTTAR, M.D.

SOMETIME PRESIDENT OF THE HARVEIAN SOCIETY



MEDICINE AND RELIGION

BY CHARLES BUTTAR, M.D.


Widespread interest has been taken of late in what is called ‘Spiritual
Healing,’ or ‘Healing by Spiritual means’; interest which is manifest
from the popularity of such books as ‘Religion and Medicine,’ and
‘Body and Soul,’ no less than from the thoughtful articles contributed
to this volume by many eminent authorities. Yet it may be observed
that, although some of these contributors belong to the profession of
medicine, it is doubtful if many medical men are acquainted with the
objects and purpose of Spiritual Healing, and probably few of them
regard the movement seriously. It is unwise, however, to adopt an
attitude of indifference towards the aspirations of earnest men, so
that it seems well to attempt to define the position of medicine with
regard to such methods of healing, to investigate the cures alleged,
to utter some warning as to possible dangers, and to inquire how far
the results justify the movement, and to what extent it is possible
to adapt the processes of Spiritual Healing to recognised forms of
treatment.

Spiritual Healing has been hailed with enthusiasm by certain members
of the Church of England, under the impression that it constitutes a
resumption of the early powers of Christianity as evidenced in the
miracles of healing ascribed to Christ and His Apostles. A theological
discussion as to the possibility of miracles occurring at the present
day is outside the scope of this article, but it would be well to
define the standpoint from which the medical man approaches all
investigations connected with disease.

The researches of scientists are conducted by the methods of
observation, experiment, and induction; it is the medical man’s duty
to observe symptoms, to experiment as to their cause, to investigate
possible remedies, and to apply these to the relief or cure of disease.
In recent times much has been done towards elucidating the influences
of mind upon body and its diseases; but so far questions connected with
the Spirit have been regarded as outside the scope of medicine.

The minister of religion, on the other hand, has been content hitherto
to leave questions of physical health to be dealt with by the doctor;
he has not interfered to any extent in mental questions, and his chief
concern has been with what is called the ‘Spirit.’ It would seem a
little difficult to define the attributes of Spirit, or to draw a
sharp line of division between spirit and mind; but, however this may
be, spirit has usually been considered as opposed to matter, and no
influence over the material diseases of the body has been ascribed
to it. Whatever views the Church may have held as to the miracles
of healing mentioned in the New Testament, she has to some extent
kept them in the background; and it is possible that they might have
remained there, but for the success obtained by certain irrational
cults that have sprung into being, with the object apparently of
abolishing both parson and doctor. The foundation on which all these
sects are based would seem to be a passage in the Epistle of St. James,
chap. v. verses 14, 15, which reads as follows: ‘Is any sick among you?
let him call for the elders of the Church; and let them pray over him,
anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord: and the prayer of faith
shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up.’

Again this is no place to go into theological discussions, such as
whether ‘elder’ can be taken to mean ‘priest,’ the views to be held
on anointing with oil, and so on. But it may be suggested incidentally
that the term ‘elder’ is hardly likely to be accepted by either the
Church or the medical profession as applicable to a person untrained
both in theology and in medicine, whose claim to authority rests on his
own assertion, and whose methods are only too liable to drift into what
is known as ‘quackery.’ Even the Peculiar People, who rely upon the
same text in support of their tenets, retain, I believe, some meaning
of authority in the word ‘elder’; and their position seems logically
sounder than that of the believer in a self-styled ‘Spiritual Healer.’

As regards the procedure of the Spiritual Healer, it would appear to
consist in laying hands on the affected part of the body, at the same
time offering up extempore prayers of a very impassioned character for
the recovery of the sick. The treatment takes place in as impressive
surroundings as possible, and at times a priest is called in to anoint
the patient with oil. It is doubtful to what extent the practitioners
of Spiritual Healing claim what are called ‘special powers’; but it
seems certain that the possession of these powers is sometimes alleged.
Unlike the Christian Scientist, the Spiritual Healer does not despise
medical assistance, though it is probable that at the present time his
treatment is sought chiefly by those to whom medical methods can offer
no further hope of cure.

It has been indicated already that the first great difficulty
experienced by a medical man, in discussing such a treatment as
Spiritual Healing, is the definition of terms. Accustomed to deal with
more or less concrete facts, a doctor has some sort of mental picture
of an infectious disease, as the reaction of the physical body to the
invasion of a germ or its poison; he can see and feel a tumour, and
determine its relation to anatomical structures, though he may not know
as yet the cause of its growth; he has learnt by experience the results
of the removal of new growths.

In the region of the mind also he has investigated many phenomena; he
is able to attribute many insane states to toxic influences; he has
studied to some extent diseases known as ‘functional’--a class that is
becoming numerically less with the advance of knowledge; but he is not
able to grasp to the same extent the meaning of the word ‘Spirit.’ The
medical man recognises in many cases the influence of the temperament
or character of the patient upon the course of the disease, and would
prefer to treat one who takes a hopeful view of the future; just as he
desires quiet cheerful surroundings, and the avoidance of conditions
that tend to irritate or depress. In so far as the ‘Spiritual’ attitude
of the patient conduces to his peace of mind, its assistance would
be welcomed by every practitioner of the healing art. But to regard
this ill-defined attitude as not only influencing the character of the
patient, but also as having a direct effect on all the ailments to
which the body is subject, is a view that can hardly be accepted so
readily. For example, it would seem to be inconceivable that Spirit
could have the slightest influence on a parasitic skin disease such as
ringworm.

This is an instance of a simple ailment due to a local extrinsic cause.
Numerous other conditions might be mentioned, such as congenital
malformation, aneurysms, valvular affections of the heart, and
strangulated hernia in which curative influence of the Spirit is
difficult to imagine. Even if a single well-authenticated miracle in a
case of any of these affections could be produced, we should still be
met by many difficulties; such as the question why a solitary sufferer,
possibly not highly distinguished for his spiritual attributes, should
be selected for the manifestation of this power. And all rational
people would admit that the occurrence of such a miracle in a case
of strangulated hernia would not justify other patients in postponing
operation in the hope of a repetition of this bloodless cure.

Thus there are limitations to the field of operation of Spiritual
Healing.

In view, however, of the hopes raised amongst many good Christians
that the Church may take part once more in healing the sick, everyone
would wish to avoid offending the susceptibilities of enthusiastic
and religious people. Still it is by members of the Church that the
question of Spiritual Healing has been brought forward, so that
it should be for the Church to define her meaning and wishes. In
the nature of things it seems impossible to define ‘Spirit’; and,
perhaps, it would be wiser not to attempt the impossible, nor to
endeavour to yoke spiritual forces to purely material conditions such
as bodily diseases. But if certain cases are produced as cures by
spiritual means, and if the co-operation of the medical profession
is desired in investigating such cures, the Church must be prepared
to accept scientific methods of inquiry, methods which do not permit
of assumptions except as tentative explanations, to be given up when
they fail to explain phenomena, or when they are replaced by simpler
explanations.

If it should appear that the results of Spiritual Healing are
attributable to ordinary activities of the human mind, and that no
difference exists between cures by this means and those resulting from
ordinary mental influences of the nature of ‘suggestion,’ then the
Church must be prepared to abandon all miraculous explanations in these
cases. From the medical point of view the main thing to be insisted
upon is that all alleged cures must be submitted to the ordinary
examination by observation, experiment, and induction.

At the present time the whole question of Spiritual Healing is in so
nebulous a condition that it is not easy to obtain suitable cases
for investigation. Much has been said and written on the matter;
comparisons have been made with the cures said to be effected at
Lourdes; even the Venerable Bede has been quoted as an authority on
medicine. But when a request is presented for the production of actual
cases for investigation by trained medical men, it is found that the
sources of supply are few and very limited.

An examination of some of these cases appears to reveal the fact that
so far no actual cure of any definite gross organic disease can be
recorded. It must be remembered that to avoid any loophole for error
the requirements of a really scientific investigation are somewhat
severe. In the first place the diagnosis of the disease must be
absolutely certain. This frequently necessitates microscopical or
bacteriological examination. A medical man is not always infallible in
his opinion of cases; and it may happen that a condition that has been
thought to be cancer turns out to be merely a comparatively harmless
inflammatory thickening. Such a condition might have recovered by
natural processes without any treatment; to attribute such recovery to
any particular treatment that the patient might be undergoing at the
time would be rash; to use such a case as an advertisement for that
treatment would be dishonest.

In the second place, a fair comparison must be made between the results
obtained by the method under investigation, and by other means of
treatment. Warts may disappear rapidly under many forms of treatment,
or with no treatment at all. To attribute the disappearance of warts to
Spiritual Healing would be very unsafe argument.

Thirdly, a careful distinction must be drawn between the cure of a
disease and the relief of subjective symptoms.

It is in this matter of subjective symptoms that Spiritual Healing
appears to have obtained the greater part of whatever success it can
boast. There is some evidence that under this treatment pain may be
relieved, and there is little doubt that patients attain a calmer,
happier and more confident frame of mind, however hopeless their
disease may be. Their outlook on life is improved, their thoughts are
directed into other channels, and the pain is forgotten, or hindered
from rising into consciousness.

Yet there are certain dangers connected with the process, to which
attention should be called. It is well to remember that, in cases such
as incurable cancer, false hopes are being raised, and the patient
is deluded into a vain belief that he will recover. How far this is
justifiable is a matter for philosophical discussion; moreover it
is true that most doctors allow their patients to delude themselves
with the same vain hopes. Still, it might be better that ministers of
religion should strive for the spiritual welfare of their charges,
rather than help directly to maintain these delusions as to physical
conditions.

More important still is the possibility that treatment, that might be
effective in the early stage of a disease, may be postponed until too
late, in order that a trial may be given to Spiritual Healing. It is
all very well to say that ordinary medical means are recognised and
that the follies of the Peculiar People and of the Christian Scientist
will be avoided; but it must be remembered that a literal reading of
the text of St. James undoubtedly may suggest to a deeply religious
person that medical methods are of minor importance. ‘The Prayer of
Faith shall save the Sick’: is it not possible that the sufferer may
possess a grain of that faith that will remove mountains? And in
the end that small focus of malignant disease, that might have been
eradicated by the surgeon’s knife, has extended and disseminated itself
until all hope of cure is gone. And such results are more likely to
follow while this treatment remains in the hands of untrained laymen.
There is great danger that an earnest person, with limited knowledge
both of theology and of medicine, may come to regard himself as
superior to theologian and physician, owing to the fervour of his
faith, combined possibly with a belief that he is endowed with special
powers. It is on practical points such as these that the medical man
is entitled to expect an expression of the views of the Church; and in
this connexion it is permissible to hope that in the examination of
‘special powers’ the authorities of the Church will be content to be
sceptics, in the true sense of the word, until irrefutable proofs of
the possession of these powers are produced.

In attempting to inquire how far the results obtained by Spiritual
Healing justify the movement, the medical man is met by the difficulty
that exists in obtaining evidence. It is true that there is a Society
whose objects are stated thus:

1. For the cultivation, through spiritual means, of both personal and
corporate health.

2. For the restoration to the Church of the Scriptural practice of
Divine Healing.

3. For the study of the influence of Spiritual upon Physical well-being.

Investigation of the literature published by this Society does not
throw much light on the methods by which these objects are pursued.
A pamphlet entitled ‘The Principles of Spiritual Healing’ seemed to
arouse hopes of elucidating the problem. Yet the author says, ‘I do
not know how “life” is affected by spiritual means, I observe that it
is so.’ There is no attempt to define spiritual means. Again, it is
asserted that no one will ever find, at meetings of the Society, a
parade of successful cases. Is the statement, then, of members of the
Society to be the only evidence vouchsafed to inquirers? And how far is
the second object of the Society to be carried? It must be remembered
that the Scriptural practice of Divine Healing was unassociated with
the ordinary medical treatment. In ‘The Principles of Spiritual
Healing’ it is asserted that miracles of healing did not cease; they
have only become less frequent because faith is less intense. The
second object of the Society is to restore to the Church this practice
of healing; and it is difficult to see how the dangers suggested
earlier in this article are to be avoided.

The fact of the matter is, that it is useless to attempt to adapt
the processes of Spiritual Healing to recognised forms of treatment,
until the exponents of the method cease to soar on the wings of the
imagination, and descend instead to the more prosaic levels of reason.
Nevertheless, there is no doubt that theologians equally earnest, but
far more rational than the founder of the Society to which reference
has been made, are anxious that something should be done by the Church
to assist in the work of restoring the sick to health. These men do
not aspire to work the miracles of Christ and the Apostles by laying
on hands and anointing with oil, but they wish to retain for the
Church some portion of the command ‘Preach the Gospel; heal the sick.’
This wish is entitled to respectful consideration by the medical
profession, and most certainly will receive it from broad-minded
medical men. But inasmuch as the trained physician must be paramount
in his own province of mental and bodily disease, it is the duty of
the minister of religion to recognise that he is subservient in purely
physical matters of health. By all means let him visit those of his own
faith who are sick. Let his object be to inspire these patients with
hope, directing the sufferer’s thoughts away from his disease to higher
things. The laying on of hands and the anointing with oil may well be
dangerous, unless used in a purely symbolic sense; for in the minds of
the more ignorant such proceedings tend to occupy the same position as
the treatment for King’s Evil in former times; and admirable though
the spirit of reverence may be, it is not good to attribute miraculous
powers to the object revered.

Therefore, let the clergyman be content, for the present, to leave
the untrained practice of methods of suggestion to quacks; and
investigation of so-called cures to the medical profession. At the same
time, let the medical man avail himself of the services of the minister
of religion in cases in which exhortation is likely to be of use; for
in the field of functional nervous conditions, and slight mental
disturbances, the help of a priest of forceful character, reasonably
controlled, may be of great service.

In concluding this article a summary of the suggestions offered for
consideration may be made:

(1) The main function of the minister of religion should be concerned
with what is called the spiritual side of man, and not with purely
material conditions, such as disease.

(2) If ministers regard the Scriptures as imposing upon them duties
in healing the sick, they should be content to be subservient to
the physician in material conditions that are not included in their
training.

(3) In dealing with phenomena as specific as diseases, the Church
must be prepared to accept scientific explanations. It is useless to
complain of the materialism of doctors in connexion with material
physical disorders.

(4) It is not unlikely that the effects of spiritual healing will prove
to be merely results of a form of suggestion.

(5) Results that can be described as curative will be found, probably,
only in what are known as functional and neurotic conditions.

(6) It is most unwise to countenance untrained laymen in carrying on
spiritual healing in the name of the Church; for in the end the Church
may find herself dragged at the heels of quackery.

(7) While much can be done by ministers of religion in encouraging
sufferers from disease, or in distracting the attention of
neurasthenics, and while such assistance should be welcomed by medical
men, yet the Church should beware of attempting to attract believers
by means of thaumaturgic displays of healing, which are open to
explanation in other ways. The Church should not enter into competition
with bone-setters, osteopaths, physical culture quacks, and other
undesirable persons.

(8) Opinion on so-called ‘special powers’ should be suspended until
alleged instances of their existence have been thoroughly investigated
by competent trained experts.



THE PATIENT

BY

STEPHEN PAGET, F.R.C.S.



THE PATIENT

BY STEPHEN PAGET, F.R.C.S.


The Bishop of Birmingham wrote to me, last year, the following letter.
He gave me leave to publish it in the second edition of a book of mine
about Christian Science: and he gives me leave to publish it again here:

‘... I should wish to make a little more of your admissions as to
Mental Therapeutics. Thus--If, as you admit, there are so many
functional disorders; and they are curable by mental influences; and
religion is a great mental influence; and this influence (“Quietism”)
is much needed in such and other cases--I should demand of the Church
that it should recognise, far more explicitly, this field of legitimate
curative power, and control it, and claim it by showing the power to
use it. The neglect of this sphere of influence by the Church plays
into the hands of Christian Science. (All this could be associated with
the revival of unction.)

‘Also, I think the medical profession likes--in public--to ignore all
this, and thus in its turn plays into the hands of pseudo-theology.
My criticism is that I want your “admissions” made the basis of a more
positive claim both on the Church and on the medical profession.

‘My own experience in the case of well-to-do people when sick or
dying is that the medical profession is very much inclined to exclude
religion in any form from sick beds till it cannot be of any use.
I do most seriously want to reform (1) the Church, (2) the medical
profession, in the light of what you admit.’

This wise letter says all, to my thinking, that need be said as to
the duty of the doctor towards the cleric, and the duty of the cleric
towards the doctor. It says not a word about the signs and wonders
alleged by the Society of Emmanuel in London: and I hope that Dr. Gore,
by his silence, condemns them, as not worthy of credence. I hope, also,
and am sure, that in a few years we shall hear less about that Society.
Meanwhile, I should like to say something about one aspect of this
matter of ‘spiritual healing,’ which has not received so much attention
as it deserves. We have heard all about the cleric, all about the
doctor: and we are in danger, I think, of forgetting the patient. We
have been tempted to believe that the patient, somehow, belongs to the
cleric and the doctor. That we may clear our minds of this mistake,
let us put ourselves in the patient’s place. Most of us, I suppose,
know that place: I have been there half a dozen times. It is the
centre of a great planetary system of kind people. Home love, and the
affection of my friends, and the pleasant goodwill of the servants, and
the wisdom and the gentleness of doctors and of nurses, and all prayers
for my recovery, wheeled round me, each in its appointed course. There
I lay, and was watched, like a big baby: and these activities of the
spiritual life encircled me, day and night, till I got better. The
point is, that it all came naturally to everybody. It was the habit
of the home, it was our usual way of doing things. My friends did not
suddenly begin to care for me: the doctors and the nurses did not
suddenly begin to be gentle: the maids were not stung by the splendour
of a sudden thought for my comfort: the use of prayer on my behalf was
nothing new. Everybody was kind to me, because everybody in the house
always is kind to me. They made me comfortable, and one prayed for me,
because they are always making me comfortable, and one daily prays for
me. All of us, except myself, were doing what we always do: and I was
being what I always am.

Illness, nine times out of ten, no more changes a man than sleep and
exercise change him. As by a long sleep, or a long day in the open air,
we gain tranquillity, insight, and self-judgment, so, by an illness,
we gain, if we will, a like measure of self-improvement. The same good
thoughts come to us, as we lie idle in a sick-bed, which come to us as
we lie idle, in holiday time, on a hillside. An illness, apart from its
drawbacks, is in reality a sort of holiday, a dull but not unprofitable
vacation, something halfway between a real holiday and what religious
people call a retreat. There is no sudden change in the patient’s
mind and outlook: only, there is more inlook, more self-doubt, more
quietness of vision.

One day, I shall put myself in the patient’s place, and not come out
of it: I shall not get well, but die. On that occasion, the love,
sympathy, goodwill, medical attendance, and prayers, will be the same
as before. They will swing round me once more, each in its proper
sphere, these familiar angels and ministers of grace defending me. But,
as I begin to stop, so they will begin to stop. It will become absurd,
for my friends to call and ask after me; absurd, for the household to
devise plans for my comfort; absurd, for the doctors to try to feel
what is left of my pulse; absurd, for anybody to pray for my recovery.
Spiritual processes are blessed with plenty of common-sense: they leave
off, when it becomes downright foolishness to go on. Let them leave
what remains of me, and start again round another centre.

They who desire, extravagantly, to put ‘spiritual healing’ among the
methods of the Christian ministry, seem to me to be losing sight of
this fact, that common-sense is an essential part of the spiritual
life. Common-sense tells me, that as I was intended to live, so I
am intended to die. I cannot see any reason, human or divine, why I
should live to old age, and die of that. I would rather not: anyhow,
I see no reason why I should. God, who brought me into the world by
my mother’s pain, will some day put me out of the world, by my own
pain. He is in no sense more on the side of life than on the side of
death. I have been looking at the ‘Order for the Visitation of the
Sick’ in the Prayer-book and I am quite sure that nobody now could
write anything half so sensible or so majestical.... _Know this, that
Almighty God is the Lord of life and death, and of all things to them
pertaining, as youth, strength, health, age, weakness, and sickness.
Wherefore, whatsoever your sickness is, know you certainly, that it is
God’s visitation._ And the prayer for a sick child, also, seems to me
a very sensible and beautiful piece of writing. I find, also, a prayer
for a sick person, ‘when there appeareth small hope of recovery.’ I
have heard it read over one at the point of death, when there was no
hope at all of recovery. ‘We know,’ it says, ‘that, if Thou wilt,
Thou canst even yet raise him up.’ I hope that I shall not, when I am
dying, hear this phrase. It rings false, to my thinking: it offends
the natural dignity of a dying man. We doctors are blamed, now and
again, for not telling the truth to patients hopelessly ill: but here
is the Prayer-book, at the last moment, hardly more straightforward.
All the same, this Order for the Visitation of the Sick is admirable;
and I desire to contrast it with the following instance, how Christian
Science treats the dying:

‘Mrs. ---- is a widow, and an old friend of mine. In February 1905,
her only child, a boy of eleven, was in the last stage of a hopeless
illness--mitral valvular heart disease, with rheumatism and dropsy. I
had an opportunity of a few minutes’ talk with the Christian Science
“practitioner”--a sweet, gentle, earnest woman--and asked her if
she really thought she would do any good. “Oh yes,” she replied,
with a smile of confidence; “I have never known a failure.” “But,” I
suggested, “the boy is very seriously ill:” and I explained the nature
of his complaint. Still confidently smiling, the practitioner replied,
“We have had worse cases than this.” I told her the best medical advice
had been taken, and the doctors had all given the boy up. Upon which
the lady remarked, with gentle emphasis, “_God_ has not given him up.”
That of course was conclusive, and I left her to do her best. I went
away at ten o’clock, and then the Scientist seated herself by the
patient, read to him from the Bible and Mrs. Eddy’s book, and exhorted
him in some such language as this: “You must not think you are ill, my
dear little boy. You are _not_ ill: you _can’t_ be ill. God would not
make you ill. He made all things good, but not illness”--and so on,
and so on. The boy, I am told, heard her patiently but wearily, and at
one-thirty he died. Then the practitioner gathered up her books and
papers and went away, and that is the end of the story.’

Here we have Christian Science in a favourable light: all the same, it
is not a pleasant picture, these falsehoods told to a dying child. If
it be not true that God ‘makes illness,’ and if it be not true that God
‘gives us up,’ then I attach no meaning at all to that Name.

Let us put ourselves at that point of the case where there appeareth
small hope of recovery. The doctors have given the patient up. God,
in their opinion, has done the same. The cleric will not say that,
not in so many words: _Yet_, he says, _forasmuch as in all appearance
the time of his dissolution draweth near, so fit and prepare him, we
beseech Thee, against the hour of death, that after his departure
hence in peace, and in Thy favour, his soul may be received into Thine
everlasting Kingdom_. The cleric does not pray for the patient’s
recovery. He does not expect anything to happen, save the patient’s
death. He will not point-blank deny the possibility of a miracle: but
he neither asks for anything to happen, nor, so far as I can see, wants
anything to happen: he only cares to be sure that the patient, who is
fast going, shall go the right way.

It is here, on this edge of time between life and death, that the
professional spiritual healer loves to perform. He desires to make
something happen: he will not take it for granted that nothing will
happen.

His position is logical, and may be held in absolute sincerity. Only,
he is bound to tell us what, in his experience, does happen: and he is
bound to tell us of every case of failure, or partial failure. And we
are bound to examine, test, cross-examine, criticise, analyse, watch,
and almost spy upon every scrap of his work; and that in a spirit of
hard and well-nigh brutal indifference to his belief in himself as a
channel of divine intervention. What else does he expect of us? What
else are we here for?

Among a pile of letters and pamphlets on my table is a tract called
‘New Eyes in answer to Prayer.’ It gives the case of Mr. Evison, of
Grimsby. He had something the matter with his eyes. At last, ‘while
walking out with a friend one day, I put my hand in my pocket for
something, and dropped it on the ground: on stooping down to pick it
up, the remaining pieces of my eyes dropped out of their sockets on to
the ground. They were about the size of the kernel of a nut.’ So he
went to a ‘Divine Healing Home,’ where he was anointed with oil in the
name of the Lord. Ten days later, as he was praying in his bedroom, he
felt two warm fingers touch his empty sockets, and they became warm.
Later, at a prayer meeting, his eyes ‘came wide open,’ and he saw
perfectly. Next day he testified to his recovery; and, says the tract,
‘When this testimony was given by Mr. Evison, there were fifty-seven
cases of blindness restored in answer to prayer.’

I feel sure that the writer of this tract thought that he was telling
the truth. And I am no less sure that a great deal of ‘spiritual
healing’ is just as worthless, just as untrue, as these Grimsby
miracles. Till the alleged wonders of spiritual healing, and its
unpublished failures, have been all submitted to keen scrutiny, and to
every severest and most searching test that can be devised in science,
nobody who knows anything about pathology can take much interest in
them. So I come back to the Bishop of Birmingham’s wise eirenicon.

It is a great pity that the work of the cleric and the work of the
doctor should ever clash; for they are ordained (the Prayer-book again)
for the mutual society, help, and comfort that the one ought to have of
the other. Only, if they are to be friends in ministering to the sick
and the dying, they must be friends always. If, in social life, they
do not get on well together, they will not work together well in the
sick-room. If the doctor makes stupid jokes against religion, and the
cleric doses his parishioners with quack medicines; if the doctor is
dull to the wonders of faith, and the cleric is dull to the wonders of
science: if neither has the grace to recognise and honour and openly
praise the good works of the other--how shall they adjust themselves,
in the presence of impending death, who thus waste the opportunities of
daily life?



THE RELATION OF PRIEST AND DOCTOR TO PATIENT

BY

JANE WALKER, M.D.

PHYSICIAN, NEW HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN



THE RELATION OF PRIEST AND DOCTOR TO PATIENT

BY JANE WALKER, M.D.


In considering the subject of Religion and Medicine, we shall be helped
by looking back to the beginnings of things, when people first realised
that illnesses existed, and that certain of them were curable. They
knew nothing of internal anatomy or physiology, nothing of the origin
and treatment of disease, nothing of its infectious, communicable
character. The treatment, or, at any rate, the healing of disease,
must have been by means of what seemed to be mental influences in
those early ages. Why, our very word ‘Influenza,’ revived within
comparatively recent years, shows how vaguely and imperfectly was
understood a disease which now we recognise as having a definite train
of symptoms, but of which we still know so little that we speak of it
merely as an _influence_.

The idea of mental influence in disease was first scientifically
formulated about twenty-five years ago, and was provided with one of
those queer names which we now use more or less glibly, with a sort
of comforting feeling that we understand the subject, when we have
successfully mastered the spelling and pronunciation--the scientific
name _psychotherapeutics_, or, in plain English, _mind cure_. These
investigations were undertaken in France, to start with, at Nancy
University, by Liébault, who published, in 1866, ‘Treatment by
Suggestion,’ and by Bernheim, and simultaneously in Paris by Charcot,
and they were primarily to observe sundry methods of treatment used
at that time in an unscientific manner, such as animal magnetism,
mesmerism, hypnotism, &c. Liébault’s book, which was taken little
notice of at the time, gave a full description of the methods he
pursued, which more or less coincide with those followed by doctors
who practise Treatment by Suggestion and Hypnotism at the present day.
He lived a retired life, and practised entirely amongst the poor, who
were devoted to him, but, at the same time, regarded him as an amiable
enthusiast. Liébault finally retired on a very small competency, not
acquired from his practice, which was altogether unremunerative.

As a result of this gathering up of all these so-called occult methods
of treatment into the more or less exact science of Psychotherapeutics,
have come into prominence many cults--or sects, shall we call
them?--such as Mental Healing, Faith Cures, Peculiar People,
Metaphysical Healing, Christian Science, each of which is overlaid with
doctrines of a more or less dubious kind. The growth of these various
bodies of late years has been extraordinarily rapid: to mention two of
them only, Christian Science and New Thought are now enthusiastically
practised and believed in by many thousands of people, both here and
in America, and hundreds of churches have been provided and erected in
their names.

It must not be lost sight of that Christian Science, as well as New
Thought, which has been described by Mr. Dresser, one of its chief
exponents, as being ‘a common-sense, rational phase of the Mental
Healing Doctrine,’ ‘are dealing with genuine _facts_ in the sphere of
Mental Therapeutics’; but these facts are entirely independent of the
theories by which either school attempts to explain them.

The spread of Christian Science was viewed with considerable alarm by
many influential members and dignitaries of our own Church, and this
feeling was brought to a head at the Pan-Anglican Congress in 1908,
when a large meeting on the subject was held at the Albert Hall, which
is fully reported in the handbook of the Pan-Anglican Congress.

Following on the Pan-Anglican Congress meeting came the Pronouncement
of the Bishops assembled in Conference at Lambeth, in July 1908. The
report of this Conference is published by the S.P.C.K. as a pamphlet.
On November 16, 1908, an important conference on Spiritual Healing
was held at Sion College, which was presided over by Prebendary
Pennefather, who said that the Church had too long neglected that
part of her teaching and ministry. Mr. Hickson gave an account of the
Society of Emmanuel, and stated that they desired to revive in the
Church the use of the gift of healing committed to her by our Lord.

The Rev. Francis Boyd explained the objects and work of the Guild of
Health. They held that bodily healing was not of primary importance,
that sanctification might indeed be gained through sickness, but
that a fuller sanctification might be gained by those who sought
to be made whole by a more real and vital union with our Lord. The
Guild of Health, Mr. Boyd proceeded to say, recognised three systems
of healing--physical, mental, and spiritual--though there was not
necessarily any opposition between them. They felt, however, that
Spiritual Healing was the only system which concerned the Church. They
were quite alive to the dangers of over-estimating the value of bodily
health, and only desired to further it so far as it ministered to the
perfection of the whole nature of man. After some further discussion,
a resolution was passed that, ‘In the opinion of this Conference,
the time has come to form a Central Church Council in the diocese of
London, for the consideration of questions connected with Healing by
Spiritual means.’

At the outset, we must take exception to Mr. Boyd’s three systems. I
very much question whether there is more than _one_ system, and I am
convinced that physical and mental are one and the same. And I would
go so far as to say, that the disastrous mistakes that have been made
in the past, and which are still in operation to-day in the treatment
of one large section of sick people, viz. the insane, largely owe
their origin to this arbitrary division. And, by a curious irony, the
branch of medical science where there is the most marked predominance
of materialism is this very department of mental diseases. This is all
the more curious when we reflect, what occult influences have been,
in all ages, supposed to work upon the insane. The obnoxious word
‘lunatic’ is a proof of this. The moon was by some supposed to have a
deleterious effect on the intellect; insane persons were spoken of as
‘moonstruck’; the periodicity of the mental attacks was also supposed
to have some relation to the lunar interval. Indeed, the whole subject
of insanity bristles with occult and mysterious theories. The really
hopeful treatment of insanity began when it--a mental disease--was
treated, not by mental, but by physical methods, and the more mental
and physical are taken together as one and the same, the more rational
and productive of good, in the best sense, is our treatment likely to
be. Indeed, the whole indivisibility of the three systems is nowhere so
well shown as in the arbitrary division of Religious Insanity. Surely
if we try to turn the minds of the sufferers from any considerations
of religion, by removing their Bibles, by preventing them from any
religious discussion, or from taking part in any religious ceremonies,
we are helping to keep up the evil. People, as we put it, become
insane on religious matters, not only because they have been dwelling
on the subject unduly, but because it is naturally of the greatest
importance, and absorbs more attention than probably anything else in
the world. Now, as the more purely physical, as distinguished from the
more or less occult methods of regarding the insane, has become the
more enlightened and modern view of the subject, so has the spiritual
method of dealing with it come into prominence. Spiritual ministrations
to the insane may be thought to be useless, or, at any rate, to be
fraught with little practical utility. Comparatively recently a man who
had charge of a country parish was appointed chaplain to Broadmoor,
which is the asylum for insane criminals. A friend, on being told of
the appointment, said to him, ‘Why, whatever will you say to them? You
can only talk to them of their sins.’ ‘Talk to them of their sins!’ he
said; ‘I shall never mention them.[10] I shall talk to them of Hope.’

  [10] ‘The Society of the Crown of Our Lord’ was formed for the
  purpose of supplying spiritual ministrations to the insane.

I have thought it advisable to dwell rather at length on the question
of the insane, because it really rather fairly represents my point of
view on this subject. Whether you agree with me or not, it is better
that I should state quite fairly and straightly my position, which has
only been reached by honestly striving after truth, and by looking
fully into the subject for the purposes of this paper. In talking about
Spiritual Healing, we are hampered at the start, because we have only
actual knowledge of physical things, i.e. of things as they appear to
us here. We have to define spiritual things in physical terms, because
they are the only things we know and understand. Time and space do not
exist in the spiritual domain. Take just one word in illustration of my
meaning, the word _Rest_. Our present state of being here has certain
peculiarities. Labour involves rest from labour, and if the limits of
rest and labour are exceeded, the result is ruin to man’s moral and
physical being. Disease is sure to follow the inactive mind or body,
and then comes a time when ‘we cannot do the things we would.’ But
these things do not exist in spiritual language. ‘They rest not day and
night, but cry “Holy, Holy, Holy.”’ When we pray ‘Eternal rest grant
them, O Lord,’ we have no thought of a period of rest as we understand
it, but rest in and with God.

We are far too apt to think that suffering is an evil--it is not
necessarily so; on the contrary it may be a blessing, because it is
often a direct means of advance towards perfection. Far too much
attention is paid at the present day to temporal benefits. ‘Get rid
of poverty, of suffering, and the world will be virtuous and happy,’
but this is not so. The people who starve and brutally ill-use their
children are not the very poorest; they are usually well-to-do in
the world. There is a great deal too much of considering poverty as
a _real_ cause of suffering. Christ’s mission of redemption was not
primarily a mission for the relief of suffering. If He bids us to take
up our cross, He also bids us, as a quite essential corollary, to
follow Him. Indeed, taking up our cross is useless, if we do not follow
Him. Pain, far from being shunned, should be welcomed and embraced,
because it brings us nearer to the sufferings of our Blessed Lord. It
is not, of course, mere pain in itself that lifts and cleanses: it is
pain rightly and courageously borne, from whatever motive. If this
be true, the modern revolt against all suffering--and here I quote
from the late Miss Caroline Stephens’s article on ‘Pain,’ published
in the _Hibbert Journal_ for October 1908--‘is obviously suicidal. To
extinguish all suffering, were that possible, would be to deprive the
world of a leverage as all-pervading and effectual towards spiritual
elevation and purification, as is gravitation towards stability.’

Pain and evil are not interchangeable terms, but are quite different.
Evil cannot be innocent, though pain can be, and often is. When the
disciples said, ‘What hath this man or his parents done that he should
be born blind?’ they formulated the usually accepted idea at that time,
and an idea, moreover, that dies very hard. The whole treatment of
disease in the Middle Ages was based on it.

If we quite briefly consider our Lord’s miracles, they were _signs_
of His Divine mission, not proofs, and in performing them, He felt
limitations; for we are definitely told that in Capernaum ‘He did no
more mighty works, because of their unbelief.’ These signs were sudden
manifestations of His power, and as such they are preferably called
Divine Healing. They showed the very highest degree of spiritual power,
but there was nothing really new. Christ was the perfect manifestation
of eternal things, and eternal things are obviously never new. Perhaps
the fact that our Lord thought it worth while to show his power in
bodily healing was intended to teach us that to keep our bodies in
health is an important religious duty, and more than that, that all
hygienic social work undertaken is an important part of the duties
of religion. Both nursing and doctoring bring us very near to part
of the work of Christ, for He went about doing good to the sick, and
He symbolised this, not only by His healing words, but by the simple
medicines and nursing of the Good Samaritan. But just as illness is
by no means caused by evil or ill-doing, so it is equally clear that
goodness does not of necessity bring health. The question of bodily
health has no connexion with spiritual conceptions at all. If it were
so, the persons who are the strongest physically would be the most
spiritual; but we know, of course, that this is not so. Take St.
Catherine of Siena, one of the greatest of saints, statesmen, and
scholars that the world has ever known. She healed others, but she
died herself of a lingering, painful disease, at the early age of
thirty-three. Also St. Paul, who prayed the Lord thrice that the thorn
in the flesh which tormented him might be removed. And the Lord’s reply
has been a help and comfort, and a lesson to countless thousands ever
since. ‘My grace is sufficient for thee, for My power is made perfect
through weakness.’ And what we so very often see now, persons bereft
of all that makes life dear, in suffering of mind or body maybe, yet
rise above their weakness, and carry through such reforms and such
noble acts as they never could have done had they been allowed to
remain in bodily health and comfortable and happy surroundings. Indeed,
St. Paul’s affliction was the means of his converting the Galatians,
for his illness compelled him to stop with them for a time, and in
writing to the Corinthians from them, he could truly say, ‘Most gladly,
therefore, will I rather glory in my weaknesses that the strength of
Christ may cover me.’ To repeat, it is our duty, as far as can be,
to keep our bodies in health, though we can most of us conceive of
circumstances when to lose our life may be indeed to save it.

In a sermon preached for the ‘Guild of Poor Brave Things,’ the present
Bishop of London, who is the president of the Guild, said: ‘What made
more impression on me as an undergraduate at Oxford than all the
sermons I ever heard in chapel was a young don, insisting, at the
risk of his life, on ministering to an undergraduate dying of a most
infectious disease.’

After all, St. Paul’s life, as narrated by himself, can hardly have
been considered as hygienic. ‘Of the Jews five times received I forty
stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned,
thrice I suffered shipwreck, a night and a day have I been in the deep;
in journeyings often, in perils of rivers, in perils of robbers, in
perils of my own countrymen, in perils from the Gentiles, in perils in
the city, in perils in the wilderness, in perils in the sea, in perils
amongst false brethren; in labour and travail, in watchings often, in
hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in cold and nakedness. Besides
those things that are without, there is that which presseth upon me
daily, anxiety for all the churches.’ In comparison with this, the
‘Don’t-worry Gospel’ of the Christian Scientists seems utterly beside
the mark. Health is undoubtedly good, but it must sometimes be cast
away in the service of others.

Of course there is a philosophical difficulty in the whole position
of the relation of religion to medicine. In a manner they are, as it
were, at loggerheads from the outset. The Church is bound to teach
that it matters not how long or how short a man’s life is, if it is
rightly spent, whereas the doctor’s point of view must be to keep the
man alive at any price. And although we may feel that, under certain
circumstances, the medical attitude might be modified, it is the only
safe one in the present state of our knowledge. Euthanasia seems,
on the surface, a most humane and comforting suggestion, but it is
allowing us finite beings to take into our own hands things which are
beyond our comprehension. We all know of instances where it must
have been thought that death would be preferable to life; but apart
from the presumptuous thought of mere human beings, look how often
the maimed bodily frame ‘rises on stepping stones of its dead self to
higher things.’ A man struck with blindness, for example, may be living
a full and perfect and whole life, in spite of his maimed condition,
because he puts out all his powers and lives at the top of his bent.
Such a man is in the highest state a healthy being. The unwhole man is
one who is always in terror of his life, and who does not accept with
faith and cheerfulness, and in a life of prayer, the ills that are
laid upon him by a wise and Divine Providence. It is true that there
are more things wrought by prayer than this world dreams of. Yes, but
even our prayers have necessary limitations arising from our imperfect
knowledge, and when St. James declared that the prayer of faith shall
save the sick, he spoke at a time when scientific investigation was
non-existent, and when people must have been sorely distressed by
their total inability to overcome the diseases from which those around
them were suffering. But for us, whose physical knowledge is so much
more exact, to refuse to accept the remedies which hard and patient
toil has discovered, under God’s help and guidance (there whether
we recognise it or not), is both presumptuous and foolish. Spiritual
Healing--i.e. a quasi-miraculous process--_must_ die a natural death,
even if the agony is prolonged. It is simply pandering to charlatanism,
and by its exaltation of the Health of the Body, is almost pagan in its
effects. It is, moreover, an emphatic expression of individualism at
a time when co-operation in every direction is the natural and right
trend of affairs; for truly never did we feel so strongly as now,
that no man liveth to himself, and no man dieth to himself--as true
of nations as of individuals. It is, therefore, in the highest sense,
reactionary, and a sentimental attempt to put the clock back, which is
doomed to failure. Take one item, which is wrapped up in this idea of
Spiritual Healing, and that is Demoniac Possession. This was an ancient
belief, as is shown by some of the miracles narrated in the Gospels,
and there is an attempt to revive it in the present day, and with that,
a practice of Exorcism as a cure for it. ‘But,’ and here I quote from
‘Religion and Medicine,’ ‘it is a significant fact that as education
spreads, belief in demoniac possession dies out, and the greatest
strongholds of the belief to-day are in non-Christian countries.’
A possible explanation of this is, that in Christian countries,
spiritual forces have been actively at work for many generations, and
that this spiritual activity has weakened the power of the forces
of evil. There is, too, no blinking the question that the behaviour
of insane people, or even of people supposed to be insane, might be
explained on the theory of demoniac possession. For example, how often
one sees people generally good and kind, and even truly religious, go
suddenly into a fury of temper or violence of some kind; or in delirium
we know that quite sweet, innocent people say dreadful things which one
would think they could not even _know_. No doubt to some people the
temporary possession by some evil spirit is a more comfortable theory
than that it is a revelation of the natural man in us, when discipline
and training are in some way relaxed, and that such is our _real_
nature let loose.

The dangers of a belief in, and of practising _consciously_, Spiritual
Healing are great, as far as doctors are concerned. It simply puts
a premium on ignorance and laziness, and is disastrous to exact
knowledge and scientific investigation. Spiritual healers assert that
to dwell on the abnormal and pathological prevents their work on the
normal. But who is to say what is the normal, till abnormalities have
been weighed and considered? No, to people like myself who practise
medicine, it is a dangerous and uncertain weapon to employ. Far be it
from me to say that the spiritual side of medicine should be ignored
altogether. We know that our prayers, rightly offered, are a help to
our patients--we _know_ that the ordained Sacraments of the Church are
a help to them. Moreover, we know very well that there is no royal road
to the treatment of disease. We know well how many cases there are in
our various hospitals and infirmaries, that have baffled all the skill
of diagnosis and treatment that has been vouched to the world up to the
present time. Is it rational to believe that such cases will be healed
by a glance, or a touch, or a word of any merely human person, however
holy, who is manifestly ignorant of any ordinary scientific knowledge?
No, Spiritual Healing as a cult, as a part of the sacramental life of
the Church, will cease to exist, but all that has come out of it will
be quickened and strengthened. We shall feel greater need of prayer
and intercession, and we shall feel more and more the real value of
meditation.

That the medical profession is fully alive to the importance of the
question, in spite of its difficulties, may be inferred from the
following extract from the _British Medical Journal_, November 6, 1909:

‘We welcome the discussion at the Harveian Society, as a sign that the
profession is more fully realising the value of certain potentialities
of healing and relief, which an ingrained materialism passes by on one
side. All around us spiritual or mental healing is going on. It is our
duty, as it is our interest, to study the process scientifically, to
define its limitations both in regard to the conditions to which it
is applicable and to the persons who can successfully apply it, and
to recognise perhaps more fully than before that man is a compound of
body and spirit, both of which have to be taken into account by those
who undertake the treatment of disease. The first step to be taken,
if the profession is not to surrender a large part of its sphere
of usefulness, is that medical practitioners should be trained in
psychology as well as in physiology. In saying this we do not wish to
be understood as pinning our faith entirely to experimental psychology.
A careful study of the works of the great masters of the human heart
is at least as important as the estimate of time reactions and the
accuracy of visual impressions.’ ‘A careful study of the works of the
great masters of the human heart’--this rings true, and makes one
hopeful, in spite of the confusion in terms that exist in regard to
Psychic Healing and Spiritual Healing.

Spiritual Healing may be defined as a change in a person’s point of
view. It may be a question of building up character, or of development
of spiritual attributes. In both cases, it is essentially a matter of
instruction. And the teaching will be effective in proportion as the
teacher is possessed of sincerity and sympathy. I am anxious to be most
emphatic in saying this, because so much misunderstanding has arisen
of late on all sides, owing to misconceptions on this point. Spiritual
Healing can only, in quite a secondary way, be a physical process.
Again, take the case of a man who becomes blind in a way that prohibits
any idea of his ever recovering his sight; he may develop into a
miserable, discontented being on account of his affliction. He comes
under the influence of some teaching, of some person, or of some sudden
religious inspiration. He is healed. Can he see again? No, but he has
risen superior to his blindness. He is a _whole_ man once more. This
is all that he and his lay friends know. He _may_ even enjoy better
physical health than he did while his blindness oppressed him. Or,
again, there may be morbid physical conditions directly or indirectly
attributable to a morbid temperament, sleeplessness due to wrongdoing,
or chronic dyspepsia due to worry. In such cases as these, the doctor
may do little or nothing. The malady is only incidentally a physical
one. Here ‘Spiritual Healing’ in the true sense is the only remedy,
and every liberal-minded medical practitioner would desire it for the
patient.

Practically, as I have repeatedly found from experience, priest and
doctor can combine to the great advantage of the patient. Medical
practitioners need have no fear that, with wise and experienced
priests, they will find their special province interfered with; on the
contrary, their hands will be strengthened, the patients calmed, and
their fortitude increased. It has been my lot many times to find the
irritable patient resentful of her illness, and of God’s dealing with
her, brought to a calm, hopeful, restful frame of mind, and that by the
ministrations and prayers of a wise and tactful priest.

Perhaps St. Catherine of Siena expresses what is meant by all this in
speaking of praying for others. ‘It is toil for him ... to hold him in
the presence of God.’ And it is here that the priest can so greatly
assist us in our labours on behalf of those weak or sick ones who have
been entrusted to our care.



FAITH AND MENTAL INSTABILITY

BY

THEO. B. HYSLOP, M.D.,

SUPERINTENDENT OF BETHLEM HOSPITAL



FAITH AND MENTAL INSTABILITY

BY THEO. B. HYSLOP, M.D.


_The Tendency for Insanity to increase on Account of the Stress of
Life._

That there is a tendency for insanity to increase on account of the
stress of competition and all the complexities of modern civilisation
few will deny. The burden of taxation upon the nerve tissues and the
drain upon their stores of energy must necessarily go on increasing as
the uses for the physical mechanism of the body and limbs diminish and
become replaced by the more complex nervous activities essential to
brain and mental avocations. The influences of rural and urban life,
trades and occupations, &c., as favouring the occurrence of insanity,
have been dealt with in an exhaustive manner in various reports,
treatises, and innumerable papers, and the result has been to apprise
us of the fact that the percentage of individuals who are incapable by
reason of mental perversion or defect from taking active and useful
parts as citizens far exceeds our previous conceptions as to the extent
of the degeneration in our midst.

It is well-nigh impossible to obtain a complete census of the physical
and mental states of the people. Statistics furnish us with so many
fallacies that for present purposes I prefer to omit them, and deal
only with broad issues which seem to have direct bearings upon the
mental health of the community.

It is now an accepted fact that civilisation, with its tendencies
towards the aggregation of individuals into dense communities, favours
the occurrence in those communities of overcrowding, pauperism, crime,
and degeneration. For those designed by habit and heredity to rural
life, migration to cities where the struggle for life is continued
under totally different circumstances is disastrous, and for them
the step from country to town is but one of the commonest of all the
steps towards mental and physical deterioration, the accidents of
civilisation finding in them merely the readiest victims.

The necessity of this migration, as determined by the state of
agriculture, makes it none the less an evil, and it is a symptom in the
evolution of an essentially agricultural race which is fraught with
extreme danger to the maintenance of its nervous and mental stability.

The problem, however, has a different aspect for those who by habit and
heredity are trained for city life, and certain it is that increased
facilities for travelling are tending to decentralise our cities and
thereby render the city dwellers healthier and more fit to cope with
the drain upon their nervous energies. As a physician, it would appear
to the writer that the problem of Sunday observances in town and
country have different bearings on the health and physical fitness of
the people. There is no doubt that periodic decentralisation of town
dwellers is essential to the maintenance of bodily health, and it is
also true that physical exercise and change from mental to physical
functioning and _vice versa_ is essential to all--i.e. if the balance
between the mental and physical powers is to be adequately maintained.
It is, of course, to be understood that to a physician the preservation
of this balance is his first care, and to him is entrusted the function
of aiding in the proper observance of all that is in agreement with
biological and, therefore, natural laws. To him there is a great
difference between ‘observance’ and ‘belief’; and he sees in them
either mutually co-operative or mutually destructive factors for good
or ill respectively.

If religious observances, under determined conditions, are found to
be useful and essential for the sane in mind and body, they are also
likely to be so, under conditions otherwise determined and arranged,
for the insane. Many insane patients are totally incapable of attending
any religious function. Some must be prohibited; others may be
encouraged. As an asylum physician the writer may state that a generic
case of religious excitement or enthusiasm may most advisedly even be
restrained from religious functions until at least the acute symptoms
have subsided. There can be little doubt that no religious officer
would be likely to succeed in accomplishing much for patients without
an accurate knowledge of insanity and the mental experiences of those
whom he seeks to influence. The fact that mental aberration forms a
special study and phase of life increases his difficulties and limits
his possibilities. Where there is apparent failure both inside asylums
and without, such failures may very possibly be attributed to the
deficiencies of the doctrine, the discipline of the religion itself,
the organisations peculiar to it, or the functionaries associated with
it in our day. If the Christian religion is a true philosophy, it is
the duty of all who profess Christianity to assist in the practical
application of its precepts, where such can be judiciously and safely
applied, taking religious things perforce as they find them, and
utilising their own special knowledge to the best possible advantage,
according to the conditions they find.

Is a person with deep religious conviction better equipped to face the
stress of life than an unbeliever? An answer to this question was given
by the writer in a paper read at the annual meeting of the British
Medical Association held at Leicester in 1905. In stating that ‘a true
and philosophical religion raises the mind above a mere incidental
emotionalism’ he used the word ‘religion’ in its literal sense, as
derived from _re_ and _lego_, to gather and consider, as opposed to
_negligens_. He in no way extended its connotation so as to include
demonstrations of incidental emotionalism, superstition, or fanaticism.
Religion and moral obligation he considered to be almost convertible
terms, both equally compatible with intuitionalism, utilitarianism,
or any other ‘ism’ derived from the study of the laws of life and
mind. Moral laws are generally principles of thought and action, which
an intelligent being must apply for himself in the guidance of his
conduct, and the translation of such general principles (expressed
either in general abstract form or in the form of a command) into
particular actions. Conformity with such precepts of morality may with
reason be regarded as a safeguard against the ‘lusts of the flesh.’

Religious enthusiasm in itself cannot justly be termed an evil.
Rather does it embody the most healthy and preservative development
of our social forces. Like many other tendencies of the mind, it is
subject to exaggeration, misapplication, and a predominance of the
emotions over the intellect. The typical cases of religious insanity
directly developable from sectarian and even undenominational religious
enthusiasm, from religious meditations, exercises, devotions, or
superstitions, are by no means so common as they are supposed to be
by the uninitiated observer. The true point lies in this, that very
many mental cases bear a strongly marked religious or at least moral
aspect. The psychology of the subject will show, for example, that
acute depression--a predominant phase of abnormal emotional life--leads
almost necessarily to a religious interpretation. And this is even more
the case with many actual sense perversions. Such, I mean, as have
ever been associated with the ideas of the supernatural.

These are not necessarily caused by religious over-excitement or
enthusiasm. They may assume the appearance of it, because, being
the deepest and most real feelings, desires, and convictions of the
perverted organic life or of the moral reaction which accompanies it,
they cannot well be expressed or described except in strong moral
terms. Over and over again does this appear, and often among those
least likely to be suspected of any religious predisposition. That
these feelings should be clothed according to the prevailing ideas and
creed of the patient is an essential reproduction of the mind. But,
after all, this only relates to the form of their appearance, and there
are many things which lie deeper.

Religious excitement is not infrequently assigned as a cause of
insanity. The writer has stated elsewhere his belief that the
philosophy of the infinite, far from being a source of aberrations
of thought which may be deemed insane, is the ultimate point of our
mental evolution, and that a true and philosophical religion raises the
mind above a mere incidental emotionalism and gives stability. With
no religion and no moral obligation the organism is apt to become a
prey to the lusts of the flesh and their consequences. Gasquet observes
that religion may either produce or tend to hinder unsoundness of mind;
that it may cause certain symptoms of insanity or modify them; and,
lastly, that it may be employed as a means of moral prevention and
treatment. He believes that every form of religion, however widely it
may differ from our standard of the truth, if it enforces the precepts
of morality, is a source of strength to the sound mind that sincerely
accepts it.

Clouston has justly observed that far more depends upon the brain that
goes to church than upon what it may obtain in the church. That is to
say, there must be the predisposition to break down, the religious
influence being often merely an accident. It must also be remembered
that religious over-enthusiasm may be merely a symptom and not a cause.

Much misconception through misquotation has arisen in connexion with
the writer’s views as to the therapeutic value of prayer. Reference
to the context of his views expressed before the Society for the
Study of Childhood will show that reference was made to the _habit_
of prayer in childhood, and its therapeutic value was there urged
more as a preventive than as a curative agent. It was urged that the
mental hygiene of childhood was not to be determined by any special
denominational method.

Such limited methods may result in the fixity of an idea or belief
quite compatible with usefulness in any sphere of activity, but they do
not deal with the broader and deeper question of the preservation of
the mental health of the individual. The exaggerated importance of the
denominational question, which has engendered passive resistance, ought
to give way to the question of mental health and engender a strong
and active resistance to all that tends to narrow or circumscribe the
mental life of the infant. It ought to be our object as teachers and
physicians to fight against all those influences which tend to produce
either religious indifference or intemperance, and to subscribe as
best we may to that form of religious belief, so far as we can find
it practically embodied or effective, which believes in ‘the larger
hope,’ though it condemns unreservedly the demonstrable superstition
and sentimentality which impede its progress and power. As an alienist,
and as one whose whole life has been concerned with the sufferings of
the human mind, the writer believes that of all the hygienic measures
to counteract disturbed sleep, depression of spirits, and all the
miserable sequelæ of a distrait mind, he would undoubtedly give the
first place to the simple _habit_ of prayer. Let the child be taught to
believe in an anthropomorphic God the Father, or in an all-pervading
medium of guidance and control, or in the integrity of a cosmic whole,
with its transmutations, evolutions, and indestructibilities. It
matters little, for they all lead in the same direction. Let there
but be a habit of nightly communion, not as a mendicant or repeater
of words more adapted to the tongue of a sage, but as a humble
individual who submerges or asserts his individuality as an integral
part of a greater whole. Such a habit does more to clean the spirit
and strengthen the soul to overcome mere incidental emotionalism than
any other therapeutic agent known to him. Our schools are as gardens
for the cultivating, judicious pruning and sustaining young life
by gardeners who have, or who ought to have, full knowledge of the
tender plants under their care. Our churches are to the moral welfare
of the community as our schools are to the intellectual. The church
has been aptly termed ‘God’s Garden,’ where the art of living good
lives and the making of character is helped by specially appointed
gardeners. It is needless to say, however, that the light of reason or
sanity, as bestowed upon us by Nature, is the light to which all other
considerations must give way lest we in our turn too soon pass the
borderland of knowing things as they are.



MEDICAL ASPECTS OF MENTAL HEALING

BY

H. G. G. MACKENZIE, M.A., M.B.



MEDICAL ASPECTS OF MENTAL HEALING

BY H. G. G. MACKENZIE, M.A., M.B.


I. _Spiritual Healing in the Light of Modern Medical Science_

I have been asked in this chapter to put together some recent
expressions of opinion by members of my own profession on the subject
of ‘mental’ and ‘spiritual’ healing. No attempt whatever is made to
give an exhaustive summary. It will be sufficient for my purpose if I
can make clear to the non-medical reader--

(1) That there is nothing new in the elaborate and confident
pretensions now being thrust forward by a variety of ‘healers.’

(2) That, so far from scientific medicine ‘standing helpless in the
presence of a new phenomenon,’ she is in possession of a very large
amount of clinical material on which quite definite conclusions have
been formed; and, as always, she is perfectly ready to consider and
investigate any new evidence which might tend to mitigate the force of
such conclusions.

Now, there are obviously two main lines of investigation. We may
consider (1) the _à priori_ reasonableness of the claim that certain
bodily diseases can be cured by ‘mental’ or spiritual processes, or we
may proceed to (2) an _à posteriori_ investigation of cases of alleged
cures. A third method of investigation, that which is, of course,
adopted in _all_ cases of scientific treatment of disease by new
methods, viz. the tabulation of all cases treated, with the diagnosis,
extent of disease, immediate and permanent results, negative as well
as positive, noted in each case, is not usually possible, since no
psychic or spiritual healer whom I have ever met seems to consider such
tabulation at all necessary or even desirable.

In the first place, I submit a somewhat long quotation from an
admirable paper[11] by one of the greatest medical authorities in the
English-speaking world, Professor W. Osler.

  [11] _The Treatment of Disease_, by W. Osler, M.D., F.R.S. London:
  Henry Frowde. 1909.

‘An influenza-like outbreak of faith-healing seems to have the public
of the American continent in its grip. It is an old story, the oldest
indeed in our history, and one in which we have a strong hereditary
interest, since scientific medicine took its origin in a system
of faith-healing beside which all our modern attempts are feeble
imitations.... Once or twice in each century the serpent entwining
the staff of Æsculapius gets restless, contorts, and in his gambols
swallows his tail, and all at once in full circle back upon us come old
thoughts and old practices which for a time dominate alike doctors and
laity. As a profession we took origin in the cult of Æsculapius ...
whose temples were at once magnificent shrines and hospitals.... Amid
lovely surroundings, chosen for their salubrity, and connected with
famous springs, they were the sanatoriums of the ancient world. The
ritual of the cure is well known, and has been beautifully described
by Pater in Marius the Epicurean.... The popular shrines of the
Catholic Church to-day are in some ways the direct descendants of this
Æsculapian cult, and the cures and votive offerings at Lourdes and Ste.
Anne are in every way analogous to those of Epidaurus.’

Osler goes on to speak with much tenderness of the apparently
ineradicable nature of the credulity evinced not merely by the
multitude but by persons educated widely, if not well, in the matter of
the healing of disease. It is indeed a portentous fact. The slightest
acquaintance with the history of therapeutics, the most casual
examination of the evidence of alleged cures, the faintest stirring of
the reasoning faculty, as the votary asks himself whether the foremost
pathologists who work continuously with the best available material in
an institution devoted to the scientific study of cancer will not be
more likely to arrive at a correct estimate of the probability of cure,
by means other than extirpation, than a quite uninstructed _masseur_
who has taken to ‘spiritual healing,’ these, one would suppose, would
be sufficient to check the growth of credulity which we see in such
evidence around us. Yet the reader will probably feel that Osler is not
going beyond the warrant of easily ascertainable fact when he says:

‘We must acknowledge its potency to-day as effective among the most
civilised people, the people with whom education is the most widely
spread, yet who absorb with wholesale credulity delusions as childish
as any that have enslaved the mind of man.’

Professor Osler’s conclusion is worth quoting:

‘Having recently had to look over a large literature on the subject of
mental healing, ancient and modern, I have tried to put the matter
as succinctly as possible. In all ages and in all climes the prayer
of faith has saved a certain number of the sick. The essentials are,
first, a strong and hopeful belief in a dominant personality, which has
varied naturally in different countries and in different ages: Buddha
in India and in Japan, where there are cults to match every recent
vagary; Æsculapius in ancient Greece and Rome; our Saviour and a host
of Saints in Christian communities; and, lastly, an ordinary doctor
has served the purpose of common necessity very well. Faith is the
most precious asset in our stock-in-trade. Once lost, how long does a
doctor keep his clientele? Secondly, certain accessories--a shrine,
a grotto, a church, a temple, a hospital, a sanatorium [Osler might
have added the admirably devised entourage in such places as ‘Physical
Culture’ Institutes and ‘light cure’ establishments], surroundings
that will impress favourably the imagination of the patient. Thirdly,
suggestion in one of its varied forms--whether the negation of disease
and pain [as among the ‘Eddyites’], the simple trust in Christ of the
Peculiar People, or the sweet reasonableness of the psychotherapeutist.
But there must be the will-to-believe attitude of mind, the mental
receptiveness--in a word, the faith which has made bread-pills
famous in the history of medicine.’ We must, however, recognise the
limitations of ‘mental healing.’ ‘Potent as is the influence of the
mind on the body, and many as are the miracle-like cures which may be
worked, all are in functional disorders, and we know only too well that
nowadays the prayer of faith neither sets a broken thigh nor checks an
epidemic of typhoid fever.’

The following extract is from an article in the _British Medical
Journal_ of March 13, 1909. The article begins by quoting from a paper
by Dr. Allan Hamilton (U.S.A.) to the following effect:

‘In all this agitation, it would almost seem as if the intelligent
physician had never made use of psychotherapy, but that he was a
mechanical giver of drugs and took little or no interest in his
patients. If the new critics of the medical profession, who have been
so active of late, would take the trouble to investigate, they would
often find, among the great and successful men of all times and of
to-day, that the human side is very strongly developed, and that their
patients are studied from every point of view, and treated accordingly.’

‘We would add,’ says the writer of the article in the _British Medical
Journal_, ‘that the intelligent application of the physician’s
knowledge of the influence of the body on the mind is the one
condition of success in the difficult art of dealing with patients
and reinforcing the curative power of Nature or, what comes to the
same thing, enabling sufferers to work out their own deliverance from
the thraldom of functional disease. All really great physicians have
used this force, sometimes, it may be, unconsciously, but often with
deliberate intent. It is the power of influencing the mind of the
patient or, in other words, of exciting confidence in his gift of
healing, that makes what is called “personal magnetism.”’

At this point I may be permitted to offer one or two observations.

(1) To speak quite strictly, it is not a question of _‘à priori’
possibility or impossibility_. As Huxley pointed out, twenty years
ago, few things can be said to be _impossible_ except mathematical
misstatements or manifest contradictions. Thus 2 + 2 cannot possibly
yield any result but 4. A square circle, a raised depression, are, in
the strictest sense of the term, _impossibilities_. But, with regard to
an enormous number of alleged phenomena popularly styled _impossible_,
what is really meant is either that they are not impossible at all, but
only in some high degree improbable, or that we have not sufficient
knowledge to enable us to say whether or not they are impossible. In
any case, before accepting them, we are bound as honest men to demand
evidence which may be thoroughly sifted. The sort of stuff which we
usually get, when we ask for such evidence, will be instanced at a
later stage.

(2) Again, to speak quite strictly, I do not know that anyone would
care to draw a hard-and-fast line between what is ‘functional’ and
what is ‘organic.’ These terms are extremely convenient, but we must
remember that they are only terms. There is an oft-recurring danger,
against which we all require to be continually on our guard, of falling
into the old error of the realists. ‘Animate and inanimate’ (assuming
that the recent claim to have demonstrated in metals a process of
reproduction analogous to those observed in protoplasm is endorsed, as
seems probable), ‘genus and species,’ ‘animal and vegetable,’ these
and many others are eminently useful classifications, and the border
line between each and its opposite varies from comparative precision to
extreme vagueness. But in no case are they absolutely precise in the
sense in which the distinction between an integer and a vulgar fraction
is precise. And in the matter of the terms ‘functional’ and ‘organic’
we must walk very warily indeed. Is epilepsy a functional neurosis or
an organic disease? Analogy suggests organic changes. No such changes
have been constantly demonstrated by _post mortem_ evidence; partly,
of course, because _post mortem_ examinations of cases of death in
the epileptic or epileptiform condition have been extremely rare,
and are not very common in cases where there is a well-authenticated
history of attacks; but partly because our investigations into the
minute anatomy of many morbid conditions are at present barred by the
limitations of microscopic vision. We have no right whatever to assert
dogmatically that there is no organic change in a tissue because we
cannot see it under a magnification of 1000 diameters--though for a
variety of reasons, which all pathologists will recognise, it is not
altogether _probable_ that a magnification of 10,000 diameters would
in such cases demonstrate a constant change. In any case, if we are
told by a spiritual or psychic healer that he cures cases of, let us
say, old-standing chronic nephritis or cirrhosis of the liver by his
own peculiar methods, our reply must be, not that this is impossible
because we are dealing with organic disease, but rather that--

(1) If he claims to act mentally or spiritually on the higher centres
of the brain and so to reach the diseased tissues, a cure is in the
highest degree unlikely, for a reason which will be given at a later
stage;

(2) If his method is avowedly quite empirical, and he only professes
to exercise a power which he does not even dimly understand, we must
respectfully ask for evidence, which can be examined and tested to the
satisfaction of a competent and impartial mind.

Now, as to the influence of ‘suggestion,’ whether or not accompanied
by other methods, e.g. hypnotism, magnetism, electricity, &c., on
(so-called) functional conditions, modern medical science speaks with
no uncertain voice.

At a meeting of the Harveian Society held last October, much
interesting information was produced.

A paper of great and permanent value was read by Dr. Claye Shaw on the
‘Influence of Mind as a therapeutic agent.’ It is impossible in the
space at my disposal to quote more than two brief extracts from his
paper. He thus defines ‘suggestion’:

‘Suggestion is the insinuation of a belief or impulse into the mind of
a subject by any means, or by words or questions, usually by emphatic
declaration; also the impulse of trust and submission which leads to
the effectiveness of such incitement.’

On the effects of treatment by suggestion, Dr. Claye Shaw writes:

‘It is with such conditions as chronic inebriety, opium, or the drug
habit, that suggestion is most powerful; with acute insanity I have not
seen it successful, and, though it has been fairly tested in asylum
practice, it has not obtained general recognition as a therapeutic
agent.’

A considerable number of medical men, alienists and others, took part
in the discussion which followed the reading of the paper.

Dr. Bramwell cited many well-authenticated cases where a cure or marked
amelioration had followed treatment by suggestion in cases of this kind
which had resisted all other treatment. Among these were instances
of neurasthenia (‘la grande hystérie’), claustrophobia, morphomania,
tendency to suicide, a morbid fear of cats. Dr. Seymour Tuke said that
he had found ‘suggestive treatment marvellously effective in cases
of inebriety in which the will was under some sort of control,’ but
that he was ‘unable to make encouraging report of the use of hypnotism
and suggestion amongst insane patients.’ [A useful and discriminating
testimony.] Dr. Lloyd Tuckey had cured ‘many cases of genuine
dipsomania, which could not be reached by drugs, by hypnotism--as well
as other intractable conditions, such as three cases of Menière’s
disease.’ Dr. R. H. Cole said that, twenty years ago, when he was
a House Physician, he first tried to hypnotise patients. Later, he
went to Paris and attended the ‘Salpétrière and Bernheim’s cliniques,
but was greatly disappointed in what he saw.... In his experience of
mental diseases he had only seen it do good in one insane patient.
It had never had any effect in his experience upon people with fixed
delusions, but it would cure dipsomania.’ Dr. T. F. Woods had treated
4000 cases, and he described a few of them in which he had obtained
remarkable results. One was that of a woman, with severe asthma and
delusions that she was going to be cut in pieces, who was cured by
suggestion at one sitting, and had kept well ever since. Another case
of severe sciatica, which had resisted every line of treatment for
eight months, was also cured rapidly. He did not find it necessary to
induce hypnotic sleep. Dr. E. A. Ash thought that ‘genuine hypnotism
(the state of somnambulism) was unsatisfactory in practice. Only a
small proportion of cases could be hypnotised, and these in his
experience did no better than those treated by simple suggestion. He
quoted two cases of nocturnal enuresis, one of which he had failed
to cure by hypnotism, whilst the other was cured by suggestion, and
a case of blepharospasm, which had been cured by suggestion, with
light massage on the eyelids, although a similar case treated only by
suggestion had not been relieved.’ Dr. W. H. Blake described ‘a series
of cases in which he had used hypnotism with the utmost benefit.... His
most remarkable cures had been effected in a case of asthma, for which
the patient was accustomed to drench himself unavailingly with drugs,
and in a severe case of dipsomania.’

Here we have grouped together the expression of the opinions of trained
minds of responsible medical men. The differences are comparatively
slight. The agreement is remarkable. Not one of them (though in one
case as many as 4000 records are in his hands) claims to have cured
what are usually called organic conditions. The whole question is as
to the best way in which suggestion can be brought to bear on patients
whose lives are in many cases rendered miserable by persistent, but
none the less ‘functional,’ ailments.

Moreover, we observe that the result of years of patient clinical
investigation is to lead them to treat every variety of psychic
therapeutics as a form of ‘suggestion.’ In no case is there so much
as a hint that a new force, viz. ‘spiritual healing,’ has appeared,
different in kind not only from other varieties of suggestion but from
the countless cults of spiritual healing, which have flourished and
disappeared in the past or the relics of which still survive in many
continental and eastern shrines.

Now, with regard to ‘spiritual healing’ in its present manifestation
in our own country the general attitude of medical science is well
described in an article which appeared in the _British Medical Journal_
of January 9, 1909. The article begins by describing some meetings
of different societies, in some cases mutually antagonistic, but
all existing for the purpose of advancing the claims of healing by
‘spiritual’ means. It goes on to say:

‘If all or any of them can show that they have discovered a new force,
or a new method of applying one already known, to the cure of disease,
rational medicine will welcome a new weapon. As we have often said,
the wise physician understands the action of the mind or the spirit
on the body, and uses it for the benefit of his patient. A man who
firmly believes in his doctor’s skill, or in the efficacy of the
treatment to which he is subjected, is in the best possible condition
for the operation of curative forces. On the other hand, a patient
who believes that nothing can cure him helps to seal his own doom.
Avicenna well said, _Plus interdum prodesse fiduciam in medicum quam
ipsam medicinam_. The “lady of the highest rank,” who is reported to
have said that she would rather die under the care of Sir Henry Halford
than recover under that of any other physician, must have been a living
tribute to his skill.

‘The fact cannot be too much insisted upon that there is nothing in the
least new about faith healing. It is as old as medicine and religion,
which in the beginning were one, as they still are among many savage
tribes. Faith can move mountains, and it matters little on what it is
based or how it is excited. As John Hunter has told us, the touch of
a dead man’s hand has charmed away a tumour. But there are limits to
its action, and while willing to accept faith as an adjuvant, no one
who knows anything about disease will admit that by itself it can heal
any but ailments the origin of which lies hid in the unknown recesses
of the nervous system. By all means let us know the full power of
the spirit over the body. Only let us have facts that can be fairly
and fully tested. A scientifically trained doctor takes nothing on
trust, and there can be no useful co-operation between medicine and
spiritual healing unless the facts of each case are fully disclosed.
That is the point where science and faith part company; the former is
as importunate as Arthur Clennam at the Circumlocution Office, and
the wonder workers are as painfully surprised at this as the youthful
Barnacle was at the persistence of “the fella that wanted to know, you
know.”’

Let us dispose at once of one simple question of fact. Modern medical
science has given the ‘spiritual healers,’ who claim to cure any
and every disease by touch or prayer or unction, an absolutely
fair hearing. Evidence is asked for, and, if it is forthcoming, is
patiently investigated, no matter how antecedently unlikely may be the
pretensions which such evidence is brought forward to support.

The general attitude of mind of the supporters of the ‘spiritual
healers’ is shown by the following illuminating extract, quoted by Sir
H. Morris in the course of a recent lecture on ‘Looking back’:

‘We have no difficulty in believing that ulcers that have a malignant
aspect may be healed by the hope that comes from a potent suggestion.
We have ourselves known of more than one case in which every clinical
sign of malignant disease of the stomach was present, and in which a
cure was effected by means that could only have derived their potency
from suggestion.’

People who are prepared to accept this _without clearly ascertained
and properly sifted evidence_ will accept anything. They simply
believe what they wish to believe. When one widely advertised ‘case of
spiritual healing’ breaks down on investigation, another is put forward.

Indeed, for the most part they have no idea as to what constitutes
evidence in these matters. In many cases the unsupported statement of
a patient, as to the diagnosis pronounced by a medical man, is calmly
accepted by them as though there were no need of further investigation.
We have heard, perhaps, more than enough of a highly placed dignitary
of the Church who believes (no doubt quite sincerely) that he was cured
of cancer by the ministrations of one of these ‘healers,’ after an
absolute diagnosis as to the existence of an inoperable tumour had been
made by a leading specialist. The repeated denial by the specialist in
question, that he ever supposed the condition which he examined to
be cancerous, makes no difference. The patient continues to announce
as a fact what is almost demonstrably untrue; and his followers will
no doubt continue to accept his statement in preference to first-hand
evidence, so long as this particular cult survives.

But, for those who are not blinded by ignorant credulity, the following
extracts from a letter from Dr. Combe Atthill may be of interest. Dr.
Atthill’s experience could, of course, be paralleled by any medical man
of long practice:

‘Shortly after I retired from practice, some ten years ago, a
well-known clergyman wrote to me, saying that members of his
congregation were being much disturbed by the advent amongst them of
a lady professing herself to be a faith healer, and saying that her
conversion was due to the fact of my having told her that she was
suffering from a dreadful disease, and that her sole hope of cure lay
in the performance of a very dangerous operation. She refused to submit
to this, and instead placed herself in the hands of “the healer,” and
was cured. He concluded by asking me to give him particulars of her
case.

‘I had no recollection of any such patient, but, as the name was given,
I traced her, and found the following particulars recorded in my case
book.

‘I had only seen the lady once in my own house, when she stated that
she was well past middle life, and for more than a year had been
weakened by a well-known condition.

‘On my telling her I must examine her she replied that she could not
submit to it that day for sufficient reasons, so I arranged that when
she was in a condition for examination she would let me know, and I
would call on her and examine her. I made no diagnosis, and gave no
opinion as to the nature of the case. I said no word about performing
an operation.

‘Instead of writing to me to call on her, she went to London. No doubt
an examination would have revealed the fact that no disease ever
existed.

‘It is impossible to deal with patients of this class. Their mental
equilibrium is disturbed; they distort what the doctor may say, and not
infrequently invent and circulate statements he never made.’


II. _The Society of Emmanuel_

Special attention has been directed of late to the claims of the
‘Society of Emmanuel.’ This society appears to profess adherence to
the tenets of the Church of England, though, except for Dr. Mylne
(formerly Bishop of Bombay), no well-known churchman, lay or cleric,
seems to be a member of the executive. The names of some ladies of
title are given in the list of the General Committee. The president
and principal ‘healer’ is a Mr. James M. Hickson. The objects of the
society are closely akin to those of other similar societies, except
that they have a distinctly ‘Church’ flavour. For instance:

‘To develop the Divine gifts left to His Church by the Master,
especially the gift of healing by prayer and laying on of hands, with
the object of using these Divine gifts ... for the healing of the body.’

A perusal of its literature reveals the usual pretension to cure and
to have cured any and every disease. Nothing like a tabulated list of
cases treated appears anywhere. The society has now opened a ‘Hospice,’
where free treatment (by prayer and laying on of hands, &c.) is given
by the aforesaid Mr. Hickson.

For some time the _British Medical Journal_, the official organ of the
British Medical Association, called attention to widely advertised
‘cures,’ and asked for information which would make it possible for an
investigation into the true facts to be carried out. The results were
hardly satisfactory. Here are some of the cases:

(1) In the _British Medical Journal_ (May 1, 1909) the following case
is given as recorded in _The Healer_ (the organ of the Society of
Emmanuel):

‘The patient fell and injured the patella, which had previously been
broken four times--two doctors expressed the opinion that he would
never have full use of the knee again. It was very painful and quite
callous (_sic_) at the time of the first treatment by prayer, but in
twenty minutes he was able to bend it without help; the following day
to walk about the house, and after four visits to resume ordinary
duties.’

Inquiries failed to elicit any details which would enable investigation
to be made.

(2) From the _British Medical Journal_ of June 5, 1909:

‘Mr. Hickson is reported to have said that he has another case of
“cancer of the throat” under his care; the patient had undergone two
operations before going to him, and is now apparently getting well. We
should be glad to have particulars of so interesting a case, but we
doubt whether they will be forthcoming.’

Apparently they were not. But the case was identified without
difficulty. A clergyman, the vicar of a country parish in the Oxford
diocese, was under ‘treatment’ by Mr. Hickson at this time for what
was undoubtedly cancer (epithelioma) of the larynx. A friend of mine
who saw him in the summer described him as being quite certain that he
was being cured, though he looked extremely ill and could hardly speak
above a whisper. A few weeks later the patient died. If Mr. Hickson
has anywhere publicly announced the failure of his ‘treatment’ in this
case, after having stated that the patient was ‘apparently getting
well,’ no such announcement has come under my notice.

(3) In its issue of June 12, 1909, the _British Medical Journal_
published a quotation from the _Evening News_, which ran as follows:

‘The following account of a cure of cancer is furnished by a lady
member of the Society of Emmanuel: “The patient was a Bishop of the
Church of England. The doctors abandoned all hope of a cure. Then Mr.
Hickson took the case in hand. He arrived on the morning of the day
on which the sufferer had to undergo an operation. Mr. Hickson prayed
with him and anointed him, followed by a laying on of hands (_sic_).
In the afternoon the surgeon arrived and made his examination. He was
greatly surprised. ‘The case puzzles me,’ he said. ‘There is a mark
of a new wound, but the cancer has gone!’ The cleric in question is
now perfectly well, and was with us the other day, but I believe the
surgeon has not yet recovered from his surprise.”’

The usual request to Mr. Hickson or any member of the Society of
Emmanuel to furnish details of this truly miraculous cure, which could
serve as a basis of investigation, followed, but no reply came to hand.
Again, I ask, has Mr. Hickson publicly repudiated this account of his
healing powers?

(4) The following is an extract from an article in the _British Medical
Journal_ of May 22, 1909:


‘SPIRITUAL HEALING AND CANCER.

‘One of the most serious difficulties in arriving at a correct
conclusion as to the curative powers claimed for spiritual healing
is the intangible nature of the evidence. For instance, most of the
patients on behalf of whom prayers were asked in the earlier numbers
of _The Healer_--which is published by Mr. J. M. Hickson, and which,
we suppose, may be regarded as the organ of the Society of Emmanuel
of which that gentleman is the president--are vaguely described
as suffering from “rheumatism,” “loss of nerve power,” “spinal
trouble,” “internal weakness,” “low vitality and great weakness,”
“heart trouble,” “internal trouble.” Some, indeed, are said to be the
subjects of “locomotor ataxy” and “consumption,” but no particulars
are given by which the diagnosis can be checked, and it is difficult
or impossible to trace the result of the treatment. In a report of the
past year published in the number for November 1908, Mr. Hickson does
give some details of a few cases. The two following taken at random
may be given as specimens: “Priest. Cancer in bowel. Specialist,
who examined him nine months ago under an anaesthetic, said that an
operation was impossible, and that he could not live for more than
about three months. He then sought help through Divine Healing, when
he was anointed with oil in the name of the Lord, and Mr. Hickson laid
his hands on him in prayer, after which he was examined by the same
Specialist, who found that a process of absorption was taking place.
He is now quite well.” “Lady’s Maid. Age about 28. Suffering from
rupture, which gave great pain. One year under treatment at Middlesex
Hospital, and, while waiting for an in-patient’s bed for operation,
was advised to seek help through Divine Healing. After three visits
to Mr. Hickson, two months ago, she is now quite well and strong, with
no pain or swelling. Her mistress also reports that serious defects of
her character are no longer apparent and her whole spiritual nature is
quickened and her duties are better done.”

‘These cases are sufficiently definite to be tested, and we should be
glad if Mr. Hickson would supply us with the information necessary
for the purpose. We should undertake not to publish the names of the
patients or any particulars by which they could be identified. We
should place the results of our investigation honestly before our
readers.’

Result: No reply. If the first of these cases is the one already
referred to, it will be observed that the clear and definite denial of
the specialist in question goes for nothing; also that, like all other
stories of the kind, this has lost nothing in the telling.

(5) The article goes on:

‘In the meantime, we have succeeded in tracing a case more remarkable
than either of the two just cited, and the result is very instructive.
It was related in the third number of _The Healer_ (March 1908, p. 9)
by the Right Rev. L. G. Mylne, D.D., formerly Bishop of Bombay, in
a paper entitled “The Anointing of the Sick for their Healing.” It
has already been quoted in the _British Medical Journal_ of January
9, 1909, p. 109; but, to enable the reader to form a correct judgment
on the subject, it must be repeated here. Bishop Mylne said: “In the
latest up-to-date book on cancer, which is in the hands of the most
scientific men of to-day, there is a case quoted which is, I have no
doubt, correctly said to be a unique one of _abortive_ cancer. The
case is fully described from a medical point of view--how a patient,
stricken unquestionably with cancer, was found to have, in place of the
tumour, something which could only be called abortive cancer, the like
of which was never heard of before. I happen to know the whole history
of the case from the brother of the patient, himself a medical man.
It was this: The patient had been suffering from a serious affection
of the throat. He went to one specialist after another. Three eminent
men told him without hesitation that he was suffering from a cancer
growing on the vocal cords, and that nothing but their total excision
could save his life. He was a hard-working priest of our Church, and,
of course, the operation meant that he would never utter a word again.
However, his life had to be saved. The doctors came; the throat was
laid open; the operator had his knife in his hand to excise the vocal
cords. He stopped dead. Instead of applying the blade of the knife, he
took hold, between his thumb and the handle, of all he found there, and
peeled it off, just like the skin of a fruit. Between the diagnosis
and the operation the patient had been anointed with oil in the name
of the Lord. That is one of not a few cases which some of us know
about, but it is by far the best defined one I know of, and one that is
actually celebrated in medical circles; not, of course, being quoted as
an instance of what may be done by anointing, but as a case unique in
surgical experience.” We went on to say that we should be glad to have
fuller particulars, and we respectfully invited Bishop Mylne to furnish
us with the name of the “latest up-to-date book on cancer” from which
he quoted.

‘In the meantime, we had been put on the track of the case by a
distinguished physician, and had obtained a report of the case from
the surgeon who operated. All, therefore, that was wanting was the
name of the book from which the quotation purported to be taken.
We communicated with Bishop Mylne on the subject, and we have to
acknowledge the courtesy with which he received our request for
information and the pains he took to procure it for us. _His Lordship
was, however, unable to gain the consent of those to whom he applied to
help in any way in supplying an answer to a very simple question._[12]
As the matter is one of general interest not only to the medical
profession but to the whole of mankind, we think it right to give the
true facts of the case, of course without disclosing the patient’s
identity.

  [12] The italics are mine. The Bishop is one whose statements, made
  on behalf of ‘spiritual healing,’ have been accepted by persons at
  any rate adequately educated. He writes a preposterous account of ‘an
  abortive cancer,’ and professes to quote from ‘the latest up-to-date
  book on cancer, which is in the hands of the most scientific men of
  to-day.’ On being asked to give the name of the book, he says that he
  cannot ‘obtain the consent of those to whom he applied.’

‘The operator was Mr. Butlin, who has been good enough to give us
permission to publish the following account. He saw the patient, who
was at that time thirty-seven years of age, in 1890. There was then a
very white patch, flat and sessile, on the middle of the left vocal
cord, looking like a papillary growth. A month later the surface seemed
to be ulcerated. The patient was seen by other well-known specialists,
who, like Mr. Butlin himself, were puzzled as to the nature of the
disease. Tubercle, papillary growth and malignant disease were in turn
considered, but no definite conclusion was arrived at. The patient was
treated in various ways for four months before it was thought right to
open the larynx. Mr. Butlin then operated in the presence of an eminent
specialist, a distinguished surgeon, and another medical man, a friend
of the patient.’

Somewhat to curtail the account, let me simply say that when the larynx
was opened it appeared that they had to do with a case either of what
is known as leukoplakia or a rather rare form of papilloma. The latter
seemed on the face of it to be the more probable, though evidently
Mr. Butlin did not think so. Whatever it was, it was certainly not
malignant. It was scraped away without difficulty: no signs of
infiltration were observed, and, when last heard of, the patient’s
recovery seemed to be complete. The rest of the article in the
_British Medical Journal_ consists of some criticisms of Dr. Mylne’s
proceedings, which certainly do not appear to me to err on the side of
severity.

The Society of Emmanuel has at last consented to allow the British
Medical Association to carry out a full investigation into its alleged
cures. The report will be interesting reading. Incidentally, it will be
instructive to note how many of the above cases have been submitted to
the investigators.

Meanwhile, the danger is a real one. Probably an investigation into the
facts of the ‘cures’ reported by other ‘psychotherapeutic’ societies
would yield much the same results as have attended the inquiries into
the claims of the Society of Emmanuel. Not one of them, so far as I
know, even attempts to put its work on a scientific basis; and all
claim implicitly, if not explicitly, that they possess a power to cure
the most malignant organic diseases as well as functional neuroses.

If this cult is allowed to spread among the ignorant and credulous
(and it seems to me that, _pari passu_ with waning faith, the most
childish credulity is rapidly increasing in our midst, often appearing
in the most unexpected places), a golden opportunity will be offered
to plausible impostors, without even the pretence of a scientific
training, to set up as ‘healers’ and reap a rich harvest of gain. A few
startling successes will be widely advertised, and the huge tale of
failures quietly ignored. But a more serious danger lies behind.

I take the following from the _British Medical Journal_ of May 1, 1909:

‘A man with some slight symptoms of bladder trouble consulted an
eminent specialist, who discovered a small growth which could easily
have been removed. It was arranged that the patient should undergo an
operation. In the meantime he fell among Christian Scientists, who
persuaded him that he was quite well. And, indeed, for a time the
symptoms almost ceased. But the insidious disease remorselessly went
its way, till the unfortunate patient was past all surgery.’

If it be said that the societies I have mentioned repudiate all
connexion with Christian Science, I reply that by their fruits must
they be judged. Both Christian Science and the various associations
for spiritual healing profess to heal any and every disease, and offer
proofs of their claim, which, whenever they have been tested, have been
shown to be utterly without foundation.


III. _Spiritual Healing on a Scientific Basis_

In a book which has recently appeared, ‘Body and Soul,’ by the Rev.
Percy Dearmer, we have a serious and able attempt to put ‘spiritual
healing’ on a scientific basis. Considerations of space do not permit
me to deal as fully as I should wish with this really interesting
book, but, if I may try to put the general argument into a single
paragraph, Mr. Dearmer’s contention is as follows:

Bodily functions and bodily health are regulated and sustained by
what may be called the lower nerve centres in the medulla of the
brain. It is by the exercise of these centres, which in turn control
the circulation, the secretion of various glands, &c., that the body
combats disease. This work is continually going on and we are for the
most part quite unconscious of it. But, says Mr. Dearmer, ‘we now know
that these centres are in direct connexion with the higher centres of
the cortex of the brain.’ I should think we do. So did our ancestors a
hundred years ago. Their knowledge of the work of such centres as the
vasomotor, the respiratory, the heat-regulating, &c., was fragmentary
and imperfect to the last degree, but not one of them had any doubt
that myriads of nerve fibres connected the cortex with the medulla.
Let us, therefore, know how to stimulate the cortex, and all disease
(organic as well as functional) can be cured. Hence, when our Lord
cured Bartimæus’s blindness, and when a ‘healer’ cures locomotor ataxy,
they are performing a function quite as natural as in the case of a
doctor who cures malaria with quinine or restores the use of muscles
in musculo-spiral paralysis by the use of the interrupted current.

This sounds plausible enough. There is nothing very new in it; indeed,
when we come to analyse it, we shall see that, so far as general
principles go, there is nothing which was not perfectly familiar in
Sydenham’s day, or which the most materialistic practitioner of our
own time would not admit without a moment’s hesitation. But, of the
limitations of his process, Mr. Dearmer only seems to have a confused
idea. Let us take one of the instances which he adduces in illustration
of his argument. He is speaking (p. 33) of the familiar phenomenon of
blushing. ‘When a person blushes,’ says our author, ‘the small arteries
are relaxed and dilate, the amount of blood in them is increased, and
this hot red fluid flows in such quantities through the capillaries
of the skin that the skin itself becomes hot and red. It is strange
that the thought “He says I am a pretty girl” should cause the small
arteries to behave in this way; but the physiological explanation is
simple enough. These arteries are supplied with muscles which regulate
them, and all muscles are worked by nerves. The thought in the higher
conscious centres has somehow seen fit to hitch itself on to the
arterial muscles, just as when we telephone to a friend in the City
the exchange connects us on to his office. _Now, supposing it to be
possible to cure a man, say of indigestion by thought, the process
would be the same._’

‘Supposing it to be possible to cure a man of indigestion by thought,’
this is a statement which no one would wish to dispute. But I
expect Mr. Dearmer would be surprised to hear that the analogy of
the excitation of the vaso-dilator centre, which causes blushing,
can be applied to only a few varieties of indigestion. Roughly, the
commonest causes of indigestion might be said to be: (_a_) anæmia,
or an insufficient supply of blood to the mucous membrane of the
stomach; (_b_) an imperfect secretion of hydrochloric acid and the
digestive fluids owing to structural defects in the glands of the
stomach, usually a hereditary condition; (_c_) a dilated organ; (_d_)
some pathological condition of the accessory large glands, e.g. liver
and pancreas; (_e_) dyspepsia, owing to faulty balance of the nervous
system. Any one of these five is fairly common, but only in the
last is there a shred of evidence for supposing that suggestion or
any other factor which would cause the higher, and through them the
lower, nervous centres to show a healthy activity, would bring about
amelioration or a cure, while there is much evidence against any
supposition of the kind.

Mr. Dearmer elsewhere lays it down that healing by excitation of the
‘undermind’ is only possible where the case is ‘curable.’ If, he says
in effect, the case is incurable, then anything like spiritual or
faith healing or suggestion will fail to bring about a cure [will the
faith-healers kindly take note of this admission?], _but so will any
other more material means_. To this one may be permitted to reply:

(i) In many acute infections, e.g. scarlet fever, typhoid fever,
cholera, where complete recovery may be expected if (_a_) the infection
is not too virulent, (_b_) the resisting power of the tissues is
vigorous and unimpaired, suggestion in any form--hope, the desire
to live, the unexpected arrival of a much-loved friend, &c.--will
most certainly assist the patient to battle with the disease. But
these factors will always operate without the elaboration of a
psychotherapeutic philosophy, and really I do not like the idea of
encouraging the adoption of a solemn form of prayer, unction, and
the laying on of hands, when all the evidence to hand points to this
‘treatment’ having in acute infections just as much value as (but
no more than) the realisation on the part of the patient that, if
he dies at that particular time, his business will be left in an
unsatisfactory condition and perhaps in incompetent hands.

(ii) In the case of what are usually termed chronic ‘organic’
conditions, honours are no longer even. Let us take four crucial
examples.

(_a_) Malignant tumours.

Certainly we have no warrant for supposing that in any, except cases
of the extremest rarity, the ‘undermind’ can possibly effect a cure.
But in a very large number of cases which are taken sufficiently early
and are otherwise favourable, extirpation by the surgeon’s knife can
and does save the life of the individual and prevent recurrence of
the tumour. I say again that an attitude of hesitancy on this subject
by those who, like Mr. Dearmer, approach the question in a scientific
spirit, and their quasi-acceptance of the alleged cures of cancer by
spiritual and other healers, which hopelessly break down when anything
like impartial investigation is brought to bear on them--all this is
likely to be productive of infinite harm. In the case of cancer or
sarcoma a day’s delay may make the whole difference between hope and
despair.

(_b_) A class of disease of which a good example is tuberculous
affections of bone.

Here we have to do with what is strictly a non-malignant condition.
That is to say, there is always a fair ground for hoping that surgery
may operate like auxiliary steam power in the battleships of the
Crimean period. Help nature (or the ‘undermind’) enough and, other
conditions being favourable, a tolerably satisfactory result may be
expected. But, really, clinical experience in all civilised communities
for the past fifty or sixty years must be allowed to have some value;
and the value surely lies in this, that the experienced surgeon knows
more or less exactly when to excise or scrape and when to refrain.
That anyone should prefer to this the services of some unqualified,
inexperienced ‘healer,’ who bids his patient trust in prayer, unction,
or whatever his method is, telling him that if his faith is sufficient
the largest sinus will be cleared up and the most distressing ankylosis
broken down, simply strikes me with amazement. If the ‘healers’ really
wish us to believe their claims, let them produce a properly codified
list of cases which can be thoroughly investigated.

(_c_) Diseases in which certain drugs are empirically known to act with
marked success, e.g. malaria. Here, properly graduated quantities of
quinine _can_ and _do_ effect an absolute cure. There is no evidence
whatever that suggestion in any form can do the same.

(_d_) What may be called progressive organic conditions, e.g. cirrhosis
of the liver.

I entirely agree that, in the conditions of which this is an example,
scientific medicine can only hope to ameliorate and render life more
tolerable to the sufferer.

But here I come to close grips with our author, whose close and fair
reasoning it is a real pleasure to follow. In a very large proportion
of the diseases from which people die, the pathological condition
consists in the deposition of fibrous tissue in some organ or part of
the general system. The causes and clinical varieties are endless, but
the result the same. To instance only a few, we have:

(_a_) Granular kidney, i.e. chronic Bright’s disease.

(_b_) Cirrhotic liver.

(_c_) Arterio-sclerosis, resulting in cerebral hæmorrhage
(stroke--apoplexy--paralysis).

(_d_) Locomotor ataxy.

(_e_) Tuberculous peritonitis with adhesions.

Now, in all these, the fibrous tissue is first deposited as an
effort on the part of Nature to repair the damage done by an acute
or chronic inflammation. But, unfortunately, not only does this
fibrous tissue take the place of normal cells, whose activity is of
the utmost importance in preserving the health of the individual, but
it invariably tends after a time to contract; from which contraction
further damage and the gravest results are likely to ensue. It will
be observed that in its simplest form a fibrotic change is of the
nature of real repair. Thus, after a deep cut or extensive injury to
the skin, we all know that a ‘scar’ results. This affords admirable
protection to the damaged area. Nor does the subsequent contraction
seriously matter. Care has to be taken to allow for it in the treatment
of extensive burns, and considerable allowance is made for contraction
in the suturing of skin incisions made in the course of an operation.
But except when the scar is on the face, where it is objectionable
for cosmetic reasons, a contracting superficial scar is seldom a
cause of serious inconvenience. But the case is very different in
the kidney or the spinal cord. Contraction there causes an extensive
destruction of delicate cells, and, by cutting off the blood supply, a
great impairment of function, if not actual necrosis, of an infinite
number of cells which were not directly affected by the preceding
inflammation. And so the vicious circle goes on.

Does Nature make no effort to play the part of the spear of Achilles
and ‘heal the wounds which she herself has made’? Only to a negligible
extent, on account of the vicious circle just alluded to. So we have
the curious phenomenon that in the skin and round the broken ends of a
fractured bone (for what is called callus is really only fibrous tissue
with special bony elements superimposed) fibrous tissue is very slowly
but more or less steadily absorbed; while in the places where such
absorption would be of the utmost value to the individual it hardly
takes place at all.

Now, the reader will observe that this fibrous tissue is, in the first
instance, laid down by the activity of leucocytes acting, to some
extent at any rate, in obedience to impulses from the circulatory
centres of the medulla, to which Mr. Dearmer quite rightly attaches
considerable importance. They make up, in fact, his ‘undermind.’ I can
only say that, so far as any pathological evidence which we possess
justifies us in coming to a definite conclusion, we can but suppose
that a stimulation of these lower centres to greater activity, by
excitation through suggestion of the higher ones, would lead to a
further deposition of fibrous tissue, to the great detriment of the
general condition of the patient. Any attempt at subsequent absorption
seems to be practically negligible.

So, in the case of blind Bartimæus, Mr. Dearmer’s contention that our
Lord acted by suggestion is almost demonstrably untrue. At least, it
is only even remotely probable on the supposition that Bartimæus was
suffering from snow blindness, toxic amblyopia, or one of those rare
conditions following on such a sudden, but transitory, disturbance of
the nervous system as sea-sickness. And since snow blindness is for
obvious reasons unknown in Palestine, and since he certainly did not
use tobacco, and probably, like most Jews, hated the sea, this does
not seem to be a likely explanation. If, on the other hand, it was a
case of corneal opacity following trachoma, cataract, or glaucoma,
or some condition resulting in atrophy of the optic nerve, it may be
safely affirmed that the method of healing was emphatically not that so
carefully worked out by Mr. Dearmer.


IV. _The ‘Neurotic’ Theory of the Miracles of the New Testament_

The whole question of our Lord’s miracles of healing, regarded merely
as so many faith cures, has been discussed in an admirable essay
contributed by Dr. R. J. Ryle to the _Hibbert Journal_ of April 1907.
He had before him no such systematic attempt to defend this view
as that made by Mr. Dearmer, but only the rather loose theorising
of certain ‘Modernists’ who, however competent they may be to deal
with textual criticism, are hardly in their element when reviewing
pathological probabilities. Dr. Ryle quotes Professor Harnack as saying:

‘That the earth in its course stood still, that a she-ass spoke, that
a storm was quieted by a word, we do not believe, and we shall never
again believe; but that the lame walked, the blind saw, and the deaf
heard will not be so summarily dismissed as an illusion.’[13]

  [13] _What is Christianity?_

Others write to the same effect. ‘Progressive criticism,’ says Dr.
Ryle, ‘has adopted, with much assurance, the opinion that the diseases
which were healed were what doctors commonly speak of as functional
diseases of the nervous system, and that the production of a strong
mental impression was the means by which the miracles of healing were
brought about. Upon this point there seems to be a practical unanimity
no less decided than that which has been reached among critics of
the liberal school upon the other two points. Thus Dr. Abbott tells
us that the mighty works were simply “acts of faith-healing on a
mighty scale.” The “Encyclopædia Biblica” lays it down that “it is
quite permissible for us to regard as historical only those of the
class which, even at the present day, physicians are able to effect
by psychical methods.” Principal Estlin Carpenter (in the “First
Three Gospels”) says, “The real force which worked the patient’s cure
dwelt in his own mind: the power of Jesus lay in the potency of his
personality to evoke this force.”

‘The writers have adopted what may be called, for brevity, the Neurotic
Theory. It is for them to show by an actual examination of the records
that the ministry of healing which is admitted “to stand on as firm
historical ground as the best accredited parts of the teaching,”
consisted in the curing of neurotic patients by strong mental
impressions. Have they done so?’

Dr. Ryle has, of course, no difficulty in showing that they have done
nothing of the kind.

‘It is not too much to say that no one of the writers who has pinned
his faith to the Neurotic Theory has made any attempt to carry it out
in detail. We are offered a number of quite commonplace allusions to
the power of mind over body, and we find a complacent conviction
expressed in several ways by several writers to the effect that a
certain class of disorders, which are vaguely alluded to as “nervous,”
are promptly curable by emotional methods. But we do not find any
recognition of the fact that only a small portion of the diseases to
which human flesh is heir are nervous diseases; and that of nervous
diseases, again, only a very small and unimportant group admit of cure
in this way.

‘What the critics have to do if they wish to convince their readers of
the Neurotic Theory of the miracles of healing is nothing less than
this:

‘1. They must show that the diseases which Christ is said to have
cured were of the kind which experience proves to admit of psychical
treatment.

‘2. They must show some good grounds for the assertion that the way in
which the cures of the healing ministry were effected was the way by
which at the present day such cures are effected, when what has been
called moral therapeutics has been the method employed.’

The difficulty is obvious. If our Lord was merely a faith healer, the
results of long and laborious investigations into many faith-healing
systems, all presenting very much the same features both in methods of
treatment and effects, justify us in assuming that the number of cures
would have been strictly limited.

‘But then, quickly enough, would follow the discovery that the powers
of healing were available not for all, but only for a small and limited
group of disorders; for in any casual collection of sick people, though
there might be perhaps here one and here another suitable patient for a
faith-healing exhibition, the majority would be unsuitable. What, then,
of the failures?

‘The difficulty here referred to has not been wholly overlooked, and it
is worth while to notice how the attempt has been made to meet it. “Did
a kind of instinct (asks Dr. Abbott) tell Him that the restoration of
a lost limb was not like the cure of a paralytic, not one of the works
prepared for Him by His Father?” and again, “Experience and some kind
of intuition may have enabled Him to distinguish those cases which He
could heal from those (a far more numerous class) which He could not.”

‘The suggestion would not commend itself to a medical reader as a
very happy way out of the difficulty. The naïve supposition that
in cases of disease which require unusually minute and scientific
investigation diagnosis was made “by a kind of instinct” or “some
kind of intuition” is quite on a par with the innocent conception of
the nature of diseases of the nervous system which Dr. Abbott shows
elsewhere. Dr. Abbott would hesitate to allow that Jesus had a kind of
instinct to guide Him safely concerning the Davidic origin of a psalm
or the date of the taking of Jerusalem. Why should he imagine that he
was less likely to be at fault in the presence of equally difficult
problems of another kind? The assumption of an infallible capacity
for discrimination, which could arrive at correct conclusions without
the use of any of the methods and appliances of scientific medicine,
is merely to substitute one kind of “supernaturalism” for another.
A miraculous faculty of diagnosis is no easier of acceptance than a
miraculous cure. A “kind of instinct” is an absurd supposition.’

Dr. Ryle then examines in detail certain of the healing miracles as
related by the Evangelists. The result is to leave the intelligent
reader in no doubt that in nine out of ten of the cases of ‘paralysis’
brought to Him, our Lord would have been, on the ‘neurotic’ hypothesis,
no more likely to effect a cure than (to take Dr. Abbott’s example) in
‘the restoration of a lost limb.’ His clear account of the case of the
man with the withered hand, which the non-medical reader will be able
to follow without difficulty, is worth quoting in full.

‘In the story of the man with the withered hand it is probable that we
have to do with another case of paralysis; and if so, we may assume
with considerable confidence that the case was one of “infantile
paralysis.” This is the affection to which at the present day nearly
all the instances of “withered hand” or of “withered leg” are owing. A
child who has been in good health, or has suffered perhaps from a few
days of feverishness, is found to have lost power in an arm or leg.
The limb hangs flaccid and motionless. The muscles are found to be
wasting when the limb is examined a week or two later, and the limb to
be cold. For a month or two there may be a little recovery of movement.
This soon stops, and the arm or leg remains ever after more or less
powerless and shrunken and cold. Normal growth is largely checked,
and, in addition to the actual atrophy and arrest of development,
various contractions and deformities become established as time goes
on. After death the muscles are found to have become much diminished
and shrunken, and throughout a certain portion of the spinal cord,
corresponding with the affected limb, destructive changes are found to
have occurred where the normal structure of ganglion cells and nerve
fibres is replaced by the remains of the inflammatory process which
has been the cause of the palsy. Such is the ordinary history of a
withered hand. Here the very word “withered,” which aptly describes
the condition of the limb, is the most appropriate description of the
result of the process which has taken place. If such was the pathology
of the case described in Mark iii. 1, it is needless to say that,
although it belongs to the group of the nervous diseases, it does not
belong to that class of nervous disease which admits of treatment by
moral impression or emotional shock.’

If this is accepted in the case of what may truly be described as
‘nervous diseases,’ then _à fortiori_ the improbability of the view
taken by ‘progressive criticism’ is enormously enhanced when we come to
consider the healing of the blind, the ‘woman with an issue of blood,’
and others where the nervous system was not primarily, if at all,
affected.

The conclusion of the whole matter seems to be this. Medical science
has at her command a vast accumulation of clinical material on which
she is able to form a clearly reasoned judgment. There is no such
thing in Medicine as a ‘chose jugée.’ No single verdict ever found
but is open to revision if the evidence is satisfactory. But we do
claim that it should be recognised, by all who have the interests of
truth at heart, that the limits of ‘psychotherapeutics,’ ‘spiritual’
or otherwise, are, according to our present knowledge, sufficiently
well defined, and that nothing has yet been brought forward to warrant
anyone in making an exception in favour of any one society or method.


V. _Clergy and Doctors_

So much may be said on the critical side.

A few words, for many are not needed, may be added as to the positive
advantages of a clear understanding between the Church and scientific
Medicine, as to the spheres in which both may hope to operate in
fulfilment of a genuine desire to cure or alleviate bodily disease.

(1) The clergy have an unrivalled opportunity of taking the lead in
educating public opinion on the subject. In no other religious body in
the world is the ministry of so high a class, not merely socially (a
small matter) but intellectually, morally, and spiritually, as in the
Anglican Communion. As a result, I know no body of men better able to
come to sane and balanced conclusions on any subjects, the details of
which are within their own experience. They touch life at many points.
Their calling brings them into contact with vast numbers of people,
and they usually show in their dealings with others a broad-minded
tolerance and shrewd common-sense which is beyond praise. I do not
hesitate to say that, if I were accused of a crime which I knew I had
not committed, I should feel safer if the trial were conducted before
a jury of Anglican clergymen than before men drawn from any other
profession; but in this matter of ‘spiritual’ or ‘psychic’ healing
they have not risen to the occasion. An article in the _Church Times_
of February 18, 1910, lies before me. A dogmatic gentleman (or lady,
perhaps--the style is essentially feminine) writes the most confident
nonsense on the subject of the ‘Gift of Healing’ that ever filled two
columns. Here is an extract, not by any means the most precious gem
from the entire chaplet, but a fair example of the whole:

‘The gift of healing is simply a human gift ... like the gift of
music or any other gift, and also, like music, present in some people
more than in others, though probably present in some degree in nearly
everybody.... The gift transcends all knowledge, it cures diseases
considered incurable. Consumption, cancer, blindness, deafness,
cripples (_sic_), &c., this is within our practical experience to-day,
so that it stands to reason that the art of curing by medicine will
gradually disappear as the gift of healing grows and develops. Not
so the scientific knowledge of the doctors, which will be used more
and more where it ought to be used, and that is _in the prevention of
disease_.’

Comment would be quite superfluous. But what follows is instructive.
In the next issue of the _Church Times_ the irrepressible Mr. Hickson
and the ‘Warden of the Guild of Health’ rush into print with some
rather vague assertions about the ‘spiritual nature’ of this gift.
There is an extremely sensible letter from a doctor, pointing out with
great moderation that, if there is any evidence for those confident
assertions, he would be glad to know what it amounted to. No clergyman
seems to have thought it worth his while to disclaim agreement with the
wild statements of the writer of the article.

In the first place, then, I would appeal to the clergy to inform
themselves as to the limitation of ‘spiritual healing,’ according to
the immense mass of evidence which has been collected and does enable
us to lay down those limitations with sufficient accuracy for the
practical purpose of life; and to act as wise advisers to their people
in this matter.

(2) The clergy will do well to remember that a great deal of bodily
_ill-health_ may exist quite independently of bodily _disease_. These
cases are commoner than cases of organic malady. There is plenty of
scope for ameliorative work in connexion with them. At the risk of
being thought egotistical, I may be allowed to quote a case which
recently came under my own observation, and which is typical of a large
number of others.

A young man, who was clearly very far from being of a neurotic or
hysterical type, came to me complaining of severe pain in the region of
the heart. It had, according to his account, been gradually increasing
for some time. It frequently came on after he had run upstairs, and on
one occasion had been intense after running to catch a train. It was
sometimes accompanied by violent palpitation and breathlessness, and
had no relation to food. Would I tell him if his heart was all right? I
examined the heart and could find no trace of any abnormal condition.
Nor could I find any evidence of anything in the abdomen which would
be likely to account for the pain. I told him that his heart was
absolutely sound and that there appeared to be nothing to suggest
disease anywhere. A rather careful diet would do him no harm. If it
did not do any good, it would be easy enough to prescribe a tonic, but
I did not think it necessary. I never expected to see him again. Five
months later, however, he called and explained with much gravity that
he had come to thank me for ‘curing his heart.’ I then remembered the
case, and was fairly staggered. ‘But bless my soul,’ I said rather
brusquely, ‘there never was anything the matter with your heart.’ ‘No,’
he replied, this time with a quiet smile, ‘I know there wasn’t. All I
can say is that from the time you told me it was all right, the pain
disappeared, and I have never had any return of it. But, look here,
when it was there, _the pain was real_.’

I have no doubt it was. To label all such cases as ‘hysterical,’
‘neurotic,’ and so on (in the ordinary connotation of these terms)
is utterly unscientific. This young fellow was a sensible, cheerful,
rather unimaginative youth without a trace of ‘_neurasthenia_’ about
him. Yet, by coming to believe that his heart was diseased, he had
quite unconsciously so excited the higher centres that the vagus nerve
returned exactly the impressions to the brain which would be conveyed
by various morbid organic conditions.

Now, in such a case as this (and the number of them must be very large
indeed) the parish clergyman has a great scope for quiet, useful work.
Let him urge the patient not to dwell on his supposed condition, but
go at once to a competent practitioner and find out what exactly
(if anything) is the matter. The clergyman will find that (if he
has the patient’s consent) the doctor will make no difficulty about
affording him the fullest information about the physical condition of
the patient, and from their co-operation the happiest results may be
expected.

(3) Conversely, there are many cases where a sympathetic doctor would
be only too glad to be in touch with a parish clergyman. Occasionally
we get at the hospital a note from a clergyman, saying that X. Y. is to
call at the Out-Patients’ Department to-day, and that the writer would
be glad to know in confidence what is the matter with him. I only wish
we had more. If there is no objection raised by the patient, there is
no difficulty whatever about entering into the fullest particulars,
and in those cases (and they are far from infrequent) where the
patient complains of ‘worries,’ a sympathetic adviser on the spot
will probably do more to bring about an improvement in the physical
condition than all the compounds of iron, strychnine, &c., in the
hospital pharmacopœia. The full consent of the patient is, of course,
an indispensable preliminary. When this is obtained, the rest is easy
enough.

(4) In the same way, when there is a suspicion or fairly clear evidence
that health is being undermined by some evil habit, the sympathetic
clergyman, who knows the patient well, can do far more for him than the
most skilled doctor who has probably only seen him once or twice. Why
any clergyman should want to babble about a special ‘gift of healing’
in dealing with these most distressing cases, considering what the
evidence on the subject of a ‘gift of healing’ is, I cannot conceive.
The unostentatious, healthy influence of a cultured Christian gentleman
has a potency which no manipulation or ritual is in the least likely
to enhance. If he will equip himself with the necessary information as
to the ‘patient’s’ actual physical condition, he can set to work to
exercise his influence, with the knowledge that he will probably effect
more, so far as a permanent result goes, than all the self-styled
‘healers’ who ever supported scientific misstatements with bad logic,
or clouded with frothy verbiage what intellect they possess.



OUR LORD’S ATTITUDE TOWARDS SICKNESS

BY

W. YORKE FAUSSET, M.A.

VICAR OF CHEDDAR AND PREBENDARY OF WELLS



OUR LORD’S ATTITUDE TOWARDS SICKNESS

BY W. YORKE FAUSSET, M.A.


(1) Men are commonly influenced by actions and personal example much
more powerfully than by abstract teaching; and the Christian tradition
conforms to this principle in placing the three Synoptic Gospels in
the forefront of the New Testament. For they set before us the mind
of Christ in the words and acts of Jesus. Thus when the thoughtful
Christian is asked, ‘What is the Gospel view of disease?’ he will be
inclined to reply, ‘The question is a difficult one, but we may say
with some confidence that our Lord answered it by His miracles of
healing.’ A study of these and of their underlying principles may help
us towards the definition we seek.

The records are fragmentary. Yet they are warm with living realism. The
great facts of our Faith stand out before us in the moving drama of
the Synoptic Gospels,[14] just as truly as they are interpreted for
us in the spiritual Gospel, the Fourth. Jesus Christ is portrayed as
the Son of Man: and whatever else that most significant title denotes,
it speaks to us of His human activity, His practical and energetic
sympathy with the sins and sorrows of men. And this activity found
its exercise in two directions: teaching and healing. The association
of the two things is noteworthy, as indicating a great principle. The
sins of mankind are not unconnected with their sicknesses; spiritual
restoration with bodily relief. A calm of soul may bring rest to the
body. He who fulfilled in His earthly ministry the prophetic office
was also a ‘Physician of extraordinary achievement.’[15] To render
Professor Bousset’s words, though we cannot reproduce their eloquence:

  [14] Euseb. H. E. vi. 14. 7. So called first by Clement of Alexandria.

  [15] Professor Bousset’s _Jesus_ (3rd ed. 1907, p. 26).

‘How the simple populace must have hailed this Deliverer in every time
of need! With what unspeakable confidence they must have thronged
him! At his coming, despair lifted its head, dull eyes glistened,
weary hands and arms reached forth towards him. They trusted him
for everything, all things became possible. Body and soul with all
their needs they brought to him for healing. The cries of need and
anguish, the confidence which knew no limitations, the craving for
help, the faltering prayer, the shouts or sobs of joy, the tears of
gratitude--daily he moved in the midst of it all.’

Are we then to conclude that our Lord attached no less importance to
the cure of bodily ailment than to the spiritual redemption of men?
Much has been written of late years which might seem to imply this.
But the whole trend of Christ’s teaching forbids us to emphasise the
value of physical well-being at the expense of the master claims of
the spirit: witness His words in the Sermon on the Mount about taking
thought for the life or the body.[16] And therefore we must avoid mere
rhetoric and special pleading.

  [16] Matt. vi. 25.

(i) It is plain, at the outset, that our Lord set certain limits to the
exercise of His healing activity. What has often been said of miracles
in general[17] may be said of the miracles of healing. There is a
severe economy in the exercise of such supernatural, or extranatural,
powers. This is illustrated by our Lord’s apparent reluctance to work
miracles when it is not certain that a true faith asks for it.[18]
In other words, the receptivity of men is necessary to the Divine
transaction with the sufferer.

  [17] E.g. by Dr. Illingworth, _Divine Immanence_, p. 120.

  [18] Cp. John iv. 48: ‘Except ye see signs and wonders, ye will not
  believe.’

Again, He is slow to exercise His power outside the boundaries of
Israel, within which He was pleased to confine His work of preaching
and healing. Possibly He knew that there He would be welcomed as a mere
wonder-working magician. He makes it a condition of His action that the
atmosphere should be one of real faith.[19] He could there do no mighty
works because of their unbelief.[20] Was it because of the waning
faith of the multitudes that, towards the end of His work on earth,
the Healing Ministry almost ceases?[21] Whether on this account, or in
the desire to escape the demonstrations of popular interest which the
miracles evoked, or because the full evidential effect of these ‘signs’
was now almost attained, He restricts His healing, life-giving power to
some four cases, one of them the raising of Lazarus. For each and all a
special reason can be found.[22]

  [19] On this see next chapter, p. 209.

  [20] Mark vi. 5, 6; Matt. xiii. 58.

  [21] Professor A. B. Bruce, _Miraculous Elements in the Gospels_, p.
  265.

  [22] Luke xiv. 3: Vindication of the true principle of the Sabbath;
  John xi.: Lazarus, His ‘friend,’ the only brother of Martha and Mary;
  also Trench’s _Miracles_, p. 434 sq.; Luke xvii. 16: The universality
  of His salvation; Mark x. 47: The appeal to the Son of David. (The
  Healing of Malchus stands by itself.)

(ii) Christ’s healing activity was therefore strictly limited in
scope. It may be asked, Was it a ‘unique manifestation of a unique
Personality’[23] or did it differ in degree rather than in kind from
the wonderful works of human healers, or, at all events, of healers
who have wrought ‘in the name of Jesus Christ’? The latter view by no
means commits its advocates to a ‘humanitarian’ view of the Person of
Jesus Christ: while it amply satisfies the facts. Again, it is not
necessary, for the purpose of the present discussion, to digress into
the field of New Testament criticism. Renan, in his ‘Vie de Jésus,’
feels himself constrained to apologise for the miraculous action of
Christ, on the ground that ‘the rôle of thaumaturge was unwelcome to
him, but was imposed upon him by his contemporaries.’[24] To Loisy, a
critic of profounder learning and far more reverent temper, it appears
that the miracles were in reality ‘works of mercy ... and not a direct
argument in favour of the Messiahship of the Saviour,’ a complexion
which was afterwards put upon them more or less unconsciously by
the Evangelists.[25] But it is quite consistent with a reverent
acknowledgment of the Divinity of our Lord, and an acceptance of the
Gospel records in substance as they stand, to hold that the miracles
of healing--with the nature-miracles we are not here concerned--were
the simple outcome of that all-embracing human pity which, in itself,
betokened the expected Messiah; rather than an immediate exercise of
Almighty power, and the utterance, within the physical order, of the
Eternal Word. We find our Lord proclaiming Himself, in the synagogue
of Nazareth, the Fulfiller of that great prophecy of Isaiah in his
sixty-first chapter, in which the Messianic mission is set forth
in language in which a spiritual and a physical deliverance are
inseparably intertwined.[26] Similarly, in answer to the Baptist’s
message, the same blending of evangelical teaching and spiritual
healing is to be noticed; and, once again, sin and disease stand out as
the dominant factors in the condition of this present world.

  [23] Illingworth, _Divine Immanence_, p. 119.

  [24] Renan, _Vie de Jésus_, p. 264.

[25] Loisy, _L’Évangile et l’Église_, p. 17.

  [26] Luke iv. 18: note the double sense in the words

(iii) But if the source of the miracles is thus to be sought in the
Sacred Humanity, that Humanity is, after all, the perfect ideal and
norm of all humanity. Whatever exceptional powers of genius, whatever
special faculties and latent gifts of mind and will have appeared at
rare intervals among men, these we should expect to find exemplified,
one and all, in the Life of Christ, had that Life come down to us in
a complete form. Now, it cannot be questioned that in every age a few
individuals have been found, who were endowed with a preternatural
therapeutic power, connected generally with a very subtle power of
sympathy, but, in some instances, if we may believe what we are told,
inherent in a person who had no wish whatever to exercise it.[27] That
some such virtue resided in Christ, and accounts for some part of His
healing work, need not be questioned. The records may be said to imply
it in two passages,[28] that which relates to the act of the woman who
touched the hem of His garment in the crowd, and that which speaks of
this method of cure as ofttimes repeated. They besought Him that they
might touch if it were but the border of his garment--and as many as
touched were made whole.

  [27] See an article by Dr. A. T. Schofield in the _Contemporary
  Review_, March 1909, for examples.

  [28] Matt. ix. 20 (Mark v. 27); Matt. xiv. 36 (Mark vi. 56); also
  Luke vi. 19: Power came forth from Him and healed them all. Cp.
  Acts, xix. 11, 12 and v. 15; the Apostles and, apparently, our Lord
  sanctioned a sort of sacramental medium of cure to meet the needs of
  a simple populace.

It is possible, no doubt, to account for such cures on a purely
naturalistic hypothesis, such as that which Keim[29] accepts, viz.
that they were cases of faith-healing; a phenomenon which recurs in
connexion with nearly every form of religious belief, and in every
stage of social development. The influence of the spiritual imagination
on the bodily state is undeniable. Everyone knows something about the
phenomena of Lourdes and Bethshan, healing resorts which, theologically
speaking, lie at opposite poles. In a cruder form the same effects are
found in connexion with holy wells and relics of the saints.[30] We may
go back to the ancients and find wonderful cures reported in the pagan
world, from the shrines of Asclepius (the patron deity of physicians).
A blind man touches the altar of Aesculapides (as he was called at
Rome) on the island of the Tiber and receives his sight.[31] The
Emperors Hadrian and Vespasian used to touch for the ‘King’s evil.’[32]

  [29] See Bruce, _op. cit._ p. 275.

  [30] See chaps. xxvi. and xxxi. in Rev. Percy Dearmer’s _Body and
  Soul_.

  [31] O. Weinreich, _Antike Heilungswunden_, p. 63. Scholars will
  remember how Plutus recovered his sight by incubation in the temple
  of Asclepius in Aristophanes’ play.

  [32] Weinreich, p. 75.

But can anyone study the miracles of our Lord as a whole (for we must
not lose sight of those wrought upon inanimate nature) and feel that
they are sufficiently explained by a familiar truth in psychology,
viz. that the religious imagination is able to stimulate the bodily
forces, whatever may be the spiritual soil in which that imagination
is bred? Faith, or a conscious receptivity in the mind of the patient,
was a frequent factor in the healing process; although there is really
nothing in the records to make us predicate it of Jairus’s daughter or
the centurion’s slave or the nobleman’s son. It is surely remarkable
that our Lord held Himself aloof from all those methods of cure which
might have suggested the enchanter and magician, particularly in the
case of demoniacs. The Jews, like other ancient nations, resorted to
the use of exorcism, incantation, and talismans, which owed their
potency to their effect on the imagination. Christ does not hypnotise
men or throw them into an ecstasy. Where faith is present, He gladly
works through it towards the salvation of the whole man. But often
there is a mere flicker of faith, a spark in the flax. In the sick
room, when the vital forces are enfeebled, the brain clouded, and the
spirits depressed by physical malady, it is a rare thing, surely, for
the flame of faith to burn brightly and the imagination to glow with
the consciousness of an unseen Presence. And the Church would have but
little encouragement to invoke for her own ministries the healing Power
of her Master, if it could only be enlisted on behalf of such patients
as already possessed ‘comfort and sure confidence in their Lord.’
We believe that the Church has something less elusive to offer her
people in their hour of need: and we return to the records of Christ’s
miracles in order to discover it.

(iv) The value of what is called ‘mental therapeutics’ is no longer
contested; it receives, and has received for some time, the careful
attention of the medical profession.[33] We approach the subject from
the religious standpoint, we base our study of it upon the teaching
and practice of Jesus Christ. Accordingly, we must discriminate
between psychic treatment and spiritual treatment. The former term,
if applicable to religious treatment, can also denote forms of mental
cure which are unconnected with religion, e.g. the use of hypnotism.
But Christ addresses Himself to the Spirit (πνευμα), that highest
element of our nature, through which the mystics hold that we have
kinship with God, and in unison with which the Holy Spirit attests
our Divine sonship. His miracles are works of _spiritual_ healing,
they are wrought for the whole man, not only for soul, and certainly
not only for body. Christ’s view of healing is relative to His view
of disease, His view of disease to His view of human nature. Had
he attached to bodily health the supreme importance which it is the
tendency of our day to assign to it, and regarded bodily pain as a
thing at all costs to be effaced, we must suppose that His whole
Life upon earth would have been devoted to the relief of sickness
and pain, and that the ‘Healing Ministry’ of His Church would have
been far more clearly defined. But no more does He abolish disease
than He abolishes pauperism. The tendency of His teaching is to
inculcate self-sufficingness (the αὐταρκεία, of St. Paul[34] and the
Greek philosophers) in the face of all temporary evils and ailments,
the conquest of things material by the spirit, its supremacy in the
hierarchy of human nature; in a word, the principle of inner control or
autonomy, as the birthright of the human spirit. In his great picture
of the Transfiguration, Raphael has caught this contrast between
the calm of the heavenly Mount above and the ineffective, agonised
distraction of suffering humanity here below, in the person of the
lunatic boy and his father. But that heavenly calm of spirit is not the
self-centred aloofness of the Stoic. The doctrine of the Incarnation
brings the Divine Saviour down to men, lifts man up to the peace of
heaven,[35] and at the same time bids him find that peace in fulfilling
the bodily duties of his corporate Church life. It will not admit of a
selfish quietism. But before this peace of God which Christ proclaims,
the worry and ‘fear-thought’ of our overstrung modern age, its neurotic
sensationalism and morbid self-analysis, would retire abashed. Christ
would teach us that human nature is itself only when it is itself in
its completeness, when the physical is truly the instrument of the
spiritual. There is no dualism, no schism in human nature as Divinely
planned. The voluptuary and the ascetic are both at fault, the former
more so because he sins against the higher self. Christ is the Saviour
of the whole man, and to the sick He restores ‘perfect soundness,’[36]
nor does He refuse to be called the Saviour of the body.[37]

  [33] See _British Medical Journal_, June 18, 1910.[**unmatched
  footnote]

  [34] Philippians, iv. 11.

  [35] There is an adumbration of this in the four sublime truths of
  Buddhism, which lead a man by the sacrifice of the lower self and the
  helping of others to the final extinction of pain. Bishop Westcott’s
  _Gospel of Life_, pp. 162, 163. Hardwick, _Christ and other Masters_,
  p. 168.

  [36] Acts iii. 16: St. Peter and the lame man.

  [37] Eph. v. 23.

(v) It is a significant fact that in the Gospels the word for ‘save’
(σῴζειν) is applied to bodily as well as spiritual salvation; it
denotes ‘to restore to health or sanity.’[38] A protest may here be
entered against the very prevalent opinion that God sent sickness upon
man, by an Almighty fiat, in order to discipline him into patience
and other Christian virtues. Such a view, crudely stated, has led to
much perplexity and distress of faith, and it is not warranted by the
teaching of the New Testament. God can bring good out of evil, even
in its worst forms. But that is not to say that God by a deliberate
act designs and causes evil. More than once in the New Testament
sickness is attributed to Satanic agency, in the case of ‘the woman
which had a spirit of infirmity eighteen years,’[39] and in that of
St. Paul’s ‘thorn in the flesh.’[40] Disease is a disturbance of the
balance of human powers, mental and bodily, a derangement of faculties
and functions. Consider the bearing of this upon life. Modern science
teaches us the doctrine of the persistence of matter; in Sir Oliver
Lodge’s words, ‘a really existing thing never perishes, but only
changes its form’--in the case of our complex human constitution,
that change of form is what we call death. It is vital force which
maintains that inner harmony which we call health: it is disease, an
accident, which impairs it. This derangement and discord is but one
instance of that general disturbance of the world’s harmony which sin
has introduced. Sometimes, as in the case of the impotent man of St.
John v., disease is the direct consequence of sinful conduct. It is
the work of the Son of Man to restore harmony and repair the breaches
in Nature’s order. And this His healing power on its spiritual, which
is its essential, side effects. Incidentally, miracles are ‘signs,’
evidences of the Christian Revelation, but their primary character is
that of ‘mighty works’ (δυνάμεις), particular manifestations of that
Power (δύναμις) which resides in the Person of the Lord. As such they
impressed King Herod, though he attributed their authorship to the
Baptist risen from the dead.[41]

  [38] E.g. Mark v. 23, 28; vi. 56; James v. 15.

  [39] Luke xiii. 16.

  [40] 2 Cor. xii. 7.

  [41] Mark vi. 14.

(vi) This Healing Power of Christ stands in closest relation to His
claim to be ‘the Life of them that believe and the Resurrection from
the dead.’ It flows from His Personality. Though that Personality is
veiled for us in profound mystery, we know that in It the Human will
and the Divine will are in perfect accord; and, therefore, it does not
surprise us that, while a place is found in the Saviour’s Life upon
earth for weariness and pain, none is found for sickness; for, in all
things, He conformed to the Will of God for man, which is health, not
sickness. Sickness is a violation of that normal condition which God
has appointed for man. When infection and disease entered into the
world, we must believe that they were part of that general imperfection
which God can only be said to will as a means to an end, or as a
passing stage in the evolution of good. God does not send sickness to
scourge us, but overrules it to purge us. In saying this, we need not
deny the possible place of death in a perfect cosmos; a death which
should have been the gradual ebbing of physical vitality, not its
sapping and undermining by the malignant forces of disease. We should
expect, then, that our Lord’s healing power would be the action of the
life-giving Spirit of God upon the spirit of man, from the very fact
that in Christ man was brought into living contact with God.

Recent psychology, especially in the investigations of Professor W.
James and the late F. W. H. Myers, has thrown a new light upon those
recesses of human nature in which our religious experiences take place.
We have learned that there is a subconscious self, a submerged portion
of our faculties, which responds to spiritual impressions and accepts
those suggestions of a Higher Power, to which mind and intellect are
sometimes deaf, a ‘subliminal self,’[42] in which religious faith
and the inspirations of genius are alike rooted, and which is _en
rapport_ with another world than that of the senses. We are reminded of
Tennyson’s words:

  [42] I.e. a self beneath the margin of consciousness. Mr. Dearmer has
  named it the ‘undermind.’

  Moreover, something is or seems,
  That touches me with mystic gleams,
  Like glimpses of forgotten dreams--
  Of something felt, like something here;
  Of something done, I know not where.[43]

  [43] _The Two Voices_

It is through that under-self that mental cures appear to operate.[44]

  [44] ‘If the grace of God miraculously operates, it probably operates
  through the subliminal door.’--Professor James.

The theory certainly contributes something to our problem, making it
conceivable, even to our finite intelligence, how the Divine Life of
Christ should enter into man, sick of body and sad of soul, and this
quite in the line of the order and natural law of God’s universe.
Christ is one with the Father; He came down from Heaven to do the will
of the Father; His works are done in the Father’s name (John x. 25).
The Father hath given the Son to have life in Himself (John v. 26).
The Divine Life is communicated to those who seek it in Christ. We
are not to restrict the thought of that Life to the immaterial part
of our nature; it is the more abundant life which floods the being of
him who ‘liveth unto God.’[45] We may not fathom its hidden processes:
like spiritual teaching, spiritual healing can come home only to the
‘spiritual men’ whose minds are ‘in tune with the Infinite.’[46] But
some desire for ‘more life and fuller’ is found in every man. Classical
scholars will remember the pathetic lines written by the statesman
Mæcenas in his last illness:

  [45] John x. 10; Rom. vi. 10.

  [46] 1 Cor. ii. 14, 15.

  Debilem facito manu,
  Debilem pede, coxa ...
  Vita dum superest, bene est.[47]

  [47] _Seneca_, Ep. 101:

  ‘What matters crippled hand and halting thigh?
  So life be left the cripple, what care I?’


In this universal fact of human nature, this desire to live, which
varies infinitely among men from the mere craving of animal existence
up to the desire for the life in God, we see man’s response to the
Giver of Life.

The appeal of the Good Physician is to human nature, and ‘He knows
what is in man.’ He takes a natural emotion or faculty, vitalises
and invigorates it. We have had to keep the connexion of spiritual
health and physical health constantly before us. There is a parallelism
between them which is no mere analogy, but is a sort of pre-established
harmony; and therefore a wise interpretation of Scripture has seen in
the Miracle an ‘acted parable.’ Thus it is in regard to the ‘desire to
live’ which supports our bodily vitality. This categorical imperative
or instinctive ‘ought’ of health is a primary instinct. The ‘will to be
well’ corresponds with the ‘will to be good’ which is the basis of the
moral life.

(2) Bearing these principles in mind, we must turn to a closer
examination of some of the miracles, with a view to some practical
conclusions in regard to the healing office of the Church of our own
day.

(i) Has the age of miracles long ceased? It has long been assumed by
religious minds, as a kind of axiomatic truth, that this is so. They
have seen in the healing miracles of Christ the unique exercise of a
power specifically Divine, a power which was continued for a time,
with other extraordinary gifts, to the early Church for reasons which
no longer held good when once she had taken firm root in the world.
But we have already shown reasons for the opinion that, unique as
is our Lord’s Humanity, we are to regard it as conditioned by those
laws of nature and material existence which are the expression in the
visible sphere of the Creative will. ‘It behoved Him in all things
to be made like unto His brethren.’[48] And there is strong reason
to hold that the true believer will be permitted, in virtue of his
fellowship with Christ, to do ‘greater works’ than those which Christ
Himself wrought,[49] greater, that is to say, not in a material but a
spiritual way. That the works in question were wrought ‘in the spirit’
is unquestioned. Consider what those ‘spiritual’ methods of the Great
Healer were. He wrought His mighty works in the Father’s name. Not only
does He lay down for others the principle of intercessory prayer, but
as Man He exercises it Himself. Of the demoniac boy He says: ‘This kind
goeth forth not but by prayer and fasting.’ St. Luke records the fact
that He made the importunity of the multitude, who sought His teaching
and healing grace, a fresh occasion for retirement and prayer.[50] The
same Gospel tells us of a night spent in prayer before the election
of the Twelve Apostles.[51] They received His commission to heal and
to teach on the succeeding day, which saw also the vast concourse of
people resorting to Him once more from all quarters. In the account
of the raising of Lazarus it is clearly laid down that Jesus Christ
knew the Father’s will in virtue of fellowship with Him in prayer
and meditation, and that He exercised His own life-giving powers in
accordance with that Will.

  [48] Heb. ii. 17.

  [49] John xiv. 12.

  [50] Luke v. 15, 16.

  [51] Luke vi. 12.

Health in itself is an ideal, the perfect harmony of all the elements,
the spiritual and the material, which constitutes a man. One of the
greatest living authorities writes: ‘Health, like every other such
name, is to be used in a relative sense; absolute health is an ideal
conception.’[52] This being so, it is apparent to any religious mind
that the true concept of the well-being, physical and even mental, of
any person is only to be found in the Mind of God. And that is only an
abstract way of saying that, if we follow Christ’s example, we shall
seek to enter into His fellowship with the Father. In that Divine
fellowship we shall be able to pray for the true health and recovery
of our sick people. ‘The prayer of faith shall save the sick,’ for
faith implies a whole-hearted acceptance of the Will of God for the
uncertain future. This gives a man the tranquillity of soul which is no
less needed for prayer than for action. Such an one possesses his own
soul. Our Lord promises to those, who ‘have faith and doubt not,’[53]
that they shall ‘remove mountains,’ a hyperbolic expression, but yet
one which seems to claim a certain power of acting upon inanimate
nature.[54] Such a power need not carry with it a positive breach of
cosmic law. It is impossible for any really reverent mind to wish, even
in the supposed interest of his dearest friend, to bend the Will of
God to his own desire. Such a rash prayer involves the fatal flaw of
that ‘doubting mind’ which is forbidden us, the mind ‘divided’ between
God and self. The spirit which unites us to God, that unfathomed inner
self, desires the universal good.

  [52] Professor Clifford Allbutt, _System of Medicine_, vol. i.,
  Intro. p. 22.

  [53] Matt. xxi. 21. Cp. James i. 6: ‘Nothing doubting.’

  [54] See Dr. Sanday, _Life of Christ in Recent Research_, pp. 223,
  224.

  Our wills are ours, we know not how:
  Our wills are ours, to make them Thine.

God wills the true health and salvation of each human soul, as He alone
can view it, in its relation both to the vast whole of immaterial being
and to the order of the material universe. ‘His will He knoweth which
way to accomplish.’ Prayer is the act of resignation of our individual
desires and thoughts into His all-wise hands. Prayer universalises
a personal longing; and so wonderful is the magic of true prayer,
fetching up from the deep of our being suggestions, inspirations,
forces unperceived by man, that it can never fail to induce a sense of
calm, the most favourable for a physical recovery; and many a time it
has effectuated that recovery itself. Science may teach the ‘reflex
action of prayer’; religion will always find authentic answers to
prayer.

Prayer is the spiritual instrument on which our Lord in His Human
Nature relies, and on which He encourages His Church to rely--‘a mighty
engine of achievement.’[55] His method was grounded in prayer, the
prayer of that Divine fellowship, which is His, as it cannot belong
to any of the sons of men, and yet in Him, ‘in the Name of Christ,’
the Church must still expect to accomplish the miracles of faith, in
proportion to the degree of her own spirituality. Who, indeed, would
have looked for miracles of healing in the English Church of the
eighteenth century, unless it were among the non-jurors, who actually
revived the apostolic rite of unction,[56] and the pious followers of
John Wesley?[57]

  [55] Sir Oliver Lodge.

  [56] The Rev. P. Dearmer, _Body and Soul_, p. 289 sq.

  [57] _Ib._ 362, 363.

(ii) But that spiritual power, thus resident in the Healer, has to
communicate itself to the subjects of His grace; subjects they must be
rather than objects. And His first purpose is to excite the dormant
energies of life and action. He does it as a wise physician will do
it, by concentrating the patient’s mind upon Himself.[58] This is done
by a question, or other means, adapted, with His profound insight into
character, to the individual case. In the case of the deaf man who had
an impediment, He effected this by isolating him,[59] and then using
physical means (with finger and saliva). Exactly parallel is the case
of the blind man, which, like the former, is recorded by St. Mark
alone.[60] He asks blind Bartimæus, ‘What wilt thou that I should do
unto thee?’[61] And this is one of several cases in which the sovereign
faculty of will leaps forth, and the confession of faith attends
it.[62] In the cure of the lame man by St. Peter (in Acts iii. 4, 5)
this concentration of the thought of the patient upon the healer is
reciprocal (ἀτενίσας ... ἐπει̑χεν).

  [58] ‘When the eye of the patient meets the eye of the physician, the
  cure begins if it is likely to take place.’--Dr. A. T. Schofield,
  cited by Dr. Worcester in _Religion and Medicine_, p. 50.

  [59] Mark vii. 33.

  [60] _Ib._ viii. 23.

  [61] Luke xviii. 41.

  [62] John v. 6, 8.

The tonic influence of a healthy personality upon the hysterical,
neurotic, and mentally diseased, not to speak of minds depressed in
a normal way, is familiar to everyone. In Dinah Morris’s visit of
comfort to the widowed Lisbeth, we have a sample of that subtlest
perception and ‘subduing influence of the spirit’ which we may call
inspiration.[63] In the New Testament it appears at its highest in
treatment of those strong cases of dual personality, mental disorder,
or hysteria, which we know as demoniacal possession. We cannot here
discuss the question, whether the sufferer was the victim of the lower
elements in his own nature or of a malignant outside influence (known
in the language of the day as a ‘demon’). On the other hand, it has
to be remembered that the Jews personified ordinary diseases; and our
Lord conformed to popular ideas when ‘He rebuked the fever’ of Simon’s
wife’s mother, unless we hold that the evangelist has coloured the
record of His action by his own mentality.[64] On the other hand, we
know little as yet of the psychological problems of civilised humanity
and less of those of half-civilised or uncivilised peoples, such as
the Galileans of our Lord’s day. But if we should allow that the demon
was merely the sufferer’s lower ego, the marvel of the cure is not
lessened. There is a great power of evil in the world; and the lower
self was entirely dominated by it until Christ emancipated the man by
His sovereign demand upon his spirit. Inner harmony was restored. They
find the man ‘sitting at the feet of Jesus, clothed and in his right
mind.’ The bodily and the mental well-being are combined in the cure.
The sufferer’s enfeebled will is braced up to respond to the Will of
the Healer, that ease shall expel disease. Within the man’s being, as
truly as without it, ‘imperavit ventis, et facta est tranquillitas
magna.’[65]

  [63] G. Eliot, _Adam Bede_, chap. x.

  [64] Luke iv. 39: _ib._ viii. 24 raises a parallel question.

  [65] Matt. viii. 26.

(iii) An analysis of the miracles of Christ indicates His attitude
towards the material and outward means, on which the physician still so
largely relies. The letter of King Abgarus to our Lord (preserved by
Eusebius), genuine or not, indicates, we may believe, the feature in
His treatment which most impressed the men of His day. ‘The story hath
reached my ears of Thee and Thy healings as wrought by Thee without
drugs and simples.’ Though this was so, He did not eschew the use of
material and visible signs, such as clay and saliva, which were adapted
to convey to sick folk that ‘mental suggestion’ of returning health,
which was His constant method of healing. In the following miracles
the use of such material means is recorded: the case of the deaf man
with an impediment (Mark vii. 33), of the blind man at Bethsaida (Mark
viii. 24), of the man blind from his birth (John ix. 6), who also was
sent to wash in the pool of Siloam. Of the Apostles, on their first
mission, it is said that they anointed with oil many that were sick,
and healed them (Mark vi. 13). Probably this element, which was in
frequent medicinal use, was in their hands ceremonial, a symbol of that
healing power of their Master which they were allowed in His name to
exercise. He Himself is found, in the great majority of instances, to
rely on the touch of the hand alone.[66] He knew that it spoke to the
heart of a Divine effluence of power as well as a human sympathy. In
one of the frescoes of the Creation, on the roof of the Sistine Chapel,
Michelangelo has pictured the form of the first man, perfect as a
statue, but lifeless until the Finger of God quickens it with a touch.
And, after all, a universal instinct associates ideas of sympathy and
positive relief with the movement of the hand. Thus in the Greek myth,
the distracted Io is comforted by the prophecy of Prometheus that the
God would restore her by his touch.[67]

  [66] Thus Luke iv. 40; Mark i. 41, vi. 5; Matt. ix. 29; Luke xiii.
  13. Mr. Dearmer gives a careful ‘Table of the healing works of
  Christ,’ _Body and Soul_, chap. xiii.

  [67] _Aesch._, Pr. V. 848, 849.

(iv) The healing of the nobleman’s son, of the centurion’s slave,
and that of the Syrophœnician woman’s daughter stand by themselves
as instances of ‘absent treatment.’ The strong impression wrought
in the mind of the father, the master, the mother, respectively, is
conveyed by a sort of telepathy to the mind of the patient. ‘Why
herein,’ surely, is a marvellous thing for those who cannot accept our
Lord’s claim to be the Son of Man in a unique sense--that He should
thus have possessed, 2000 years ago, a knowledge of the mysterious
processes of human nature which modern science is only now beginning
to divine. It is in that fact that the ‘glory’ (Luke xiii. 17; John
xi. 40), the ‘wonder’ (Matt. xxi. 15), the ‘strangeness’ (Luke v. 26)
of the miracles of Christ consist. They are ‘works of power,’[68]
‘outcomings of that mighty power of God which was inherent in
Christ,’[69] and which He exerted within a region of human nature then
unexplored. We cannot ponder too deeply on that great saying of St.
Augustine, ‘Portentum fit non contra naturam, sed contra quam est nota
natura.’[70] Who shall attempt to lay down the laws which govern the
operation of the spiritual upon the material? and still more to delimit
the powers of the Personality and Will of Him, in whose name Apostles,
Saints of the Church, and humble Christians unrecorded in history have
wrought cures, which only a purblind scepticism can gainsay?

  [68] Matt. xi. 20; Luke xxiv. 19; Acts ii. 22, &c.

  [69] Abp. Trench, _Synonyms of New Testament_ (Art. xci.).

  [70] _De Civitate Dei_, xxi. 8; quoted by Dr. Sanday, _Life of
  Christ, &c._, viii., adding, ‘miracle is not really a breach of the
  order of nature; it is only an apparent breach of laws that we know,
  in obedience to other and higher laws that we do not know.’



THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN CHRISTIAN HEALING

BY

W. YORKE FAUSSET, M.A.

VICAR OF CHEDDAR AND PREBENDARY OF WELLS



THE PRINCIPLES OF MODERN CHRISTIAN HEALING

BY W. YORKE FAUSSET, M.A.


The psychologists teach us that a man’s ‘self’ is a larger thing than
the ‘me’ which, we might say, a child has in view when it puts out a
hand to get a sweetmeat for itself. As Professor W. James says, ‘The
old saying that the human person is composed of three parts--soul,
body, and clothes--is more than a joke’; and he goes on to include
in that self the man’s immediate family, his home, the property he
has collected.[71] And then we think of Aristotle’s definition of man
as a ‘political’ or social animal--the social self with its wider or
narrower reach--for ‘properly speaking a man has as many social selves
as there are individuals who recognise him.’

  [71] _Text Book of Psychology_, pp. 177, 178.

(i) All this has an important bearing on the subject of health and
disease. We are all influenced by our environment for better or worse.
The material and visible conditions of life, our home, our friends and
associates, our country, our daily occupations, contribute to make us
what we are. Life is defined by Herbert Spencer as ‘the continuous
adjustment of internal relations.’ It may be difficult or even
impossible to attain to the stable equilibrium of perfect goodness,
perfect health, perfect happiness; and, in fact, neither science nor
religion encourage us to expect such a consummation within the limits
of this earthly existence.

But there may be a ‘continuous adjustment’; and it must be the
practical aim alike of religion and of science to mould the individual
by the environment which will best harmonise his personal good with
the good of the whole. We have to elevate the conditions of human
existence. The individual has not only to adapt himself to his
environment, in the temper of _laisser faire_, but to adapt it to
the satisfaction of his highest good. ‘Great religious consciences
have taken their post, confronting society, as representing in
themselves truth and right, because behind them was God, while behind
existing societies there is only man, nature, and circumstances. Far
from consenting to identify himself with the social conscience, the
religious conscience disposes man to oppose the rights of God to those
of Cæsar, the dignity of the human person to public constraint.’[72] In
the language of religion, ‘No man hath seen God at any time: if we love
one another, God dwelleth in us, and His love is perfected in us.’ That
is the ideal of the Christian Society, the Body of Christ, actuated
by the great principles of faith, hope, and love. And much might have
been said of the duty of a Christian State to secure to all its members
the elementary conditions of a healthy, useful citizenship. Most of
our disease is a disgrace to our Christian civilisation, because it is
preventable. The ancient poet rightly associates the spectres of Care,
Hunger, and Fear with the grim forms of Disease at the portals of his
Inferno:

  [72] Emile Boutroux, _Science et Religion_, p. 206.

  Vestibulum ante ipsum primisque in faucibus Orci
  Luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia Curae:
  Pallentis qua habitant Morbi, tristisque Senectus,
  Et Metus et malesuada Fames, ac turpis Egestas.[73]

  [73] Virg. _Æneid_, vi. 273 sq. ‘Right in front of the doorway and
  in the entry of the jaws of hell Grief and avenging Cares have made
  their bed; there dwell wan Sickness and gloomy Eld, and Fear, and
  ill-counselling Hunger, and loathly Want.’--J. W. Mackail.

(ii) But the problem of the prevention of sickness scarcely concerns us
here, though it requires a passing reference. It has been sufficiently
shown that you cannot isolate the individual from the society in
which he moves; that were to make him an unreal abstraction. The
Church has never committed that mistake in her dealing with the sick.
When we pray, in the Office for the Visitation of the Sick, that God
would ‘preserve and continue this sick member in the unity of the
Church,’ the prayer breathes the very spirit of ancient piety. It is
an unspeakable help, in dealing with a sick man, to be able to appeal
to his own conscious and sincere membership in the Body of Christ. The
Visitation Office is ‘peculiarly a ministration for those who have been
trained beforehand in the fulness of Church life and privileges.’[74]
Herein, as often, the Prayer-book sets up an ideal standard. But,
however far our actual practice falls short of it, we must work towards
it. It is said of St. Francis of Assisi that, ‘in each one, with whom
he had to deal, he saw a possible Christ.’ A bold saying, had it not
been that the Master Himself had anticipated it.[75] In the Christian
view of things, the sick and suffering, whatever their religious
attainments and professions may have been, have a clear claim upon the
other members of the One Body. Christian faith can only heighten human
sympathy.

  [74] Dean Savage, _Pastoral Visitation_, p. 76.

  [75] Matt. xxv. 35, 36.

And in the New Testament there are not wanting indications that the
faith of friends has a vicarious efficacy. In such faith the force of
suggestion is at work, but it is a collective suggestion. There is
the typical case of the four friends, who were not to be put off by
the crush at the doors, but resolutely stripped the roofing in order
to lower the paralytic, as he lay on his pallet, into the Saviour’s
immediate presence. Such unconventional faith was irresistible. ‘When
Jesus saw their faith, He said unto the sick of the palsy, Son, thy
sins be forgiven thee.’[76] The bodily cure soon followed. The fact
is, that such faith diffuses a spiritual atmosphere; it is contagious
and works from mind to mind. ‘Our bodies isolate us, our spirits unite
us.’[77]

  [76] Mark ii. 5. Cp. T. T. Carter, _Holy Eucharist_, pp. 150, 151,
  especially the words, ‘To lean one’s own failing faith on the more
  trustful, assured faith and convictions of others. So that the same
  spirit may communicate itself to the sad and darkened soul by a
  mutually organic sympathy.’

  [77] Sir Oliver Lodge, _Man and the Universe_, p. 47.

Similarly, in the raising of Jairus’s daughter an emphasis is laid on
the necessity of a sympathetic atmosphere: first, by the fact that only
three, the elect among the chosen Twelve, SS. Peter, James and John,
were allowed to attend their Lord; secondly, by the exclusion of all
others in the house, except the father and mother of the child. The
professional mourners and musicians were turned out--not merely because
they ‘insulted the dumbness of sincere sorrow and the patient majesty
of death’ (Farrar), but because they diffused, as their behaviour soon
showed (κατεγέλων αὐτου̑), an atmosphere of unbelief. The Lord wishes
to remove all antagonistic and disturbing human presences and to speak
Himself in power to the innermost soul of the departed maiden. On the
other hand, if the air was charged with unbelief, if those He wished
to help were without faith, as was the case in His own village of
Nazareth, ‘He could there do no mighty work.’[78]

  [78] Mark vi. 5.

We trace the same principle in His dealing with those whom He had
healed. Sometimes He bids them ‘go and tell their friends how great
things God has done for them,’ as when he refused to keep the Gadarene
demoniac by His side. At another time he bids them tell no man of
the cure which had been wrought. This difference of treatment can be
explained most simply, if we suppose that in the one case Christ knew
that the patient’s ordinary _milieu_ was favourable to his progress in
bodily and spiritual health, in another case He knew that this was not
so. So it was in the case of the leper of St. Mark i. 44. And, again,
this difference of treatment may have been ‘grounded,’ as Archbishop
Trench says, ‘on the different moral conditions of the persons healed.’
It is so still, for human nature remains constant to certain broad
types. Some overwrought people require the absolute isolation of a
‘rest cure’; others, who are moody and self-centred, can only rally
their disused powers in contact with invigorating companionship.
They are the unhappy victims of that numbness of spirit of which R.
L. Stevenson writes so pathetically in his essay entitled ‘Ordered
South.’[79]

  [79] Cp. the medieval complaint of ‘accidie.’

(iii) This brings us naturally to consider the special value which
Christ attaches in His teaching to a corporate act of prayer. For this
is the meaning of the words ‘If any two of you shall agree on earth
as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them
of my Father which is in Heaven; for where two or three are gathered
together in My Name, there am I in the midst of them.’ And this it
is which has moulded the form of the Lord’s Prayer, and that of the
great Sacrament of Unity, our highest act of intercession. Thus our
Lord enjoined upon His disciples the duty and the efficacy of combined
spiritual effort.[80] There is a power intensive, as well as extensive,
in collective prayer. In this, as well as in other activities of
the spirit, the total effect gained is larger than the sum total of
units of effort. There is a sort of analogy here with the force of
collective suggestion, which we have been considering above: but we
must not expect to find a complete philosophical explanation of any
great spiritual principle. Our personal experience verifies the value
of corporate prayer. If it were not so, religion would be an individual
matter alone; it would lack its most universal expression, that of
common worship. It is because the Church in our country lost for a long
period her corporate consciousness, at least in a large degree, that
she lost sight of the power of corporate intercession for the sick
members of the Body of Christ. (Of the faithful departed we may not
here speak.) But her formulas and liturgy have been a standing witness
against such obliviousness, with which the Church of to-day can hardly
be taxed, and those who profess their belief in the Communion of
Saints find in such intercession its most practical expression.

  [80] Bertroux, _op. cit._ p. 189: ‘une volonté collective est sans
  rapport avec la somme algébrique des volontés individuelles.’

Consider the bearing of all this on our highest act of worship, the
Holy Communion. There are few parish priests who cannot testify from
their own experience to the wonderful--if not miraculous--effects of
the reception of the Sacrament upon apparently dying persons, who had
been given up by medical science. There is nothing in this that need
surprise the Christian believer, nothing that is really repugnant
to the findings of modern science. The Apostle Paul, writing to the
Corinthians about the profanation of the Lord’s Supper, attributes to
this cause certain physical consequences incurred by the offenders.
‘For this cause many among you are weak and sickly, and not a few
sleep.’[81] There is a natural and proper antipathy in many minds to
the idea that the Sacramental Elements operate as a charm. Such an
idea would be irrational and superstitious, and we are not intended
to conceive of a vindication of the sanctity of the Lord’s Supper by
material and simply magical penalties. The offence of the Corinthians
was the irreverence of ‘not discerning (or discriminating) the Body,’
and Apostolic teaching plainly implies that a spiritual offence of
itself acts upon the bodily organism, by a mysterious law of the Divine
government.[82] (Here again we must not say that God sent the disease.)
Surely, then, it may be argued, per contra, that a reverent reception
of the Eucharist makes for health and life, for it brings the failing
bodily and spiritual powers of the sick into contact with the Divine
and immortal life which animates the mystical Body of Christ. This line
of argument may be illustrated by the words of the late F. W. H. Myers:
‘To keep our chemical energy at work, we live in a warm environment and
from time to time take food. By analogy, in order to keep the spiritual
energy at work, we should live in a spiritual environment, and possibly
from time to time absorb some special influx of spiritual life.’[83] It
remains only to add that the words of administration in our Communion
Office embody the truth for which we are pleading. ‘The Body of our
Lord Jesus Christ, which was given for thee, preserve thy body and soul
unto everlasting life.’

  [81] 1 Cor. xi. 30.

  [82] In the _Cambridge Bible_, note _ad locum_, Dr. Lias says we can
  well understand how a crime against His Body and Blood would deprive
  any Christian, who committed it, of His presence, and predispose it
  to sickness and even death.

  [83] _Human Personality_, i. 218; quoted by Dearmer, _Body and Soul_,
  p. 123.

(iv) The charisma, or gift, of healing, is named by St. Paul among the
spiritual gifts of the Apostolic Church,[84] and is associated in one
place with the working of miracles (‘powers’).[85] We have endeavoured
to show that it was not intended as a transient but a permanent
endowment of the Church. But, in the degree in which the Church
corporate falls short in spirituality, her spiritual powers wane. The
Encyclical Letter and Report of the recent Lambeth Conference mark a
step in advance, though it may not be a long step, towards the revival
of this healing agency of the Church. The Committee appointed to report
on this particular subject was of opinion ‘that the prayers for the
restoration of health, which it recommends, may be fitly accompanied by
the apostolic act of the Laying-on-of-Hands.’[86] We may be disposed
to regret that this primitive rite is not mentioned in Resolution 35,
which recommends ‘the provision for use in Pastoral Visitation of some
additional prayers for the restoration of health more hopeful and
direct than those contained in the present Office for the Visitation
of the Sick.’ Desiring, as we do, to follow ‘the example’ of our
Lord Himself and not merely of ‘His Holy Apostles,’[87] we may most
reasonably ask for authority to administer the blessing through one of
the outward signs which He employed. A ceremony, duly authorised by
the Church, would have much value, as regulating and controlling the
impulse to invoke the healing ‘charisma,’ which at present is often
bestowed and received through ‘spiritual healers’ who lack the full
official sanction of the Church.

  [84] 1 Cor. xii. 9, 30.

  [85] _Ibid._ 29.

  [86] Report (1908), No. VII. iv. p. 137.

  [87] Order of Confirmation, first Collect, Mark vi. 5.

(v) There is another Ministry of Healing, which the Divine Love has
provided for the weary body and the careworn mind, which contributes
its own part to the restoration of the sick. It is the silent ministry
of Nature. Within the ailing body she exerts her healing power; the
doctor’s best ally, on the physical side, is the _vis medicatrix
naturae_, that strange recuperative power which resides in organisms,
and offers a standing resistance to the inroads of disease and age.[88]
And then outside there are the soothing influences of the world of
Nature, which steals into the troubled spirit to bring the calm which
Wordsworth, in his poem on ‘An Evening by the Sea,’ likened to the
hush of worship:

  [88] Cp. Sir James Paget’s words: ‘The power to repair itself belongs
  to the subject of injury in the same sense and degree as does its
  power to develop itself and grow and live.’--_Life_, p. 295.

  The holy time is quiet as a nun
  Breathless with adoration.

Hebrew literature shows little trace, even indirectly, of that sympathy
with Nature, which is the best contribution of what is called ‘natural
religion’ to the inheritance of the human spirit, except when Nature is
regarded in her grander and more awe-inspiring aspects, those of the
thunder-cloud, the whirlwind, the raging fire, the roaring sea. Yet it
is not altogether fanciful to find, in our Lord’s habit of retirement
to the mountain’s side for prayer, His invitation to the disciples to
come apart by themselves to rest awhile in a ‘desert place,’[89] His
choice of the evening hour, at the setting of the sun, for performing
His works of mercy, some sanction for that modern sense of the Divine
beauty and mystery of Nature in her quiet aspects.[90]

  [89] Mark vi. 31.

  [90] Compare also the nature-parables.

We must believe that Christ Himself was susceptible in a singular
degree to those natural influences. After the intense spiritual strain
of the Temptation, ‘angels came and ministered to Him.’ A great
modern artist, M. Tissot, pictures the scene as only the imaginative
symbolism of genius would have done. The Saviour lies at full length,
utterly exhausted, with every muscle, as it were, relaxed, and through
the twilight appear myriads of outstretched angel-hands, reviving
the Sacred Body with the touch of spirit-life. Here we have, as in a
figure, the expression of the unseen forces of Nature, ministering to
the Will of the God of Nature, on behalf of the heirs of salvation and
of Him who is the author of our salvation and the Prince of Life.

There is no rule absolute about the influence of familiar scenes and
old associations upon the weary or ailing spirit. For some people the
cure lies in surroundings as novel and unfamiliar as possible. This is
where tact and sympathy on the part of the doctor and nurse and friends
come in--questions which must not be confused with natural affection,
for in that case they would vary directly, whereas they have been known
to vary inversely, with nearness of blood relationship. The quick
intuition of sympathy can judge of the environment best adapted to the
patient’s individual need. The rigid order and routine of the hospital
ward may be torture to the sick person who comes from one sort of home
and paradise to one who comes from another. The more we can bring of
the ‘mind of Christ’ into the tender care of the sick, the more right
we shall have to expect that the power of His name will bless our
efforts.

(vi) Again, our Lord’s attention to details, i.e. the material
conditions of health, calls for notice. We have referred to His
provision of rest for His tired followers. We find Him giving
directions, after the recall of Jairus’s daughter to life, that food
should be given to her. ‘Life restored by miracle must be supported
by ordinary means.’[91] The familiar routine of healthy life is to
be resumed as soon as possible. Lazarus is to be loosed from his
cerements, when the awe of the bystanders blind them to the practical
and obvious. And quite in line with this is Christ’s readiness to
conform, in His dealings with men, to the existing social and religious
system. It was so notably in the case of the leper, who was bidden,
after his cure, to go and show himself to the priest and to make
the customary offerings.[92] At the pool of Bethesda Christ helps
the impotent man, who has no friend to help him. He leaves the rest
of the multitude to the natural operation of the waters.[93] It was
a different matter when, as in the case of the Rabbinical rule of
Sabbath observance, the conventional practice was inimical to the
freedom of the spirit. Our Lord will never allow the spiritual and
essential in things to be overlaid by the material and accidental.
Traditionalism was then broken through. The principle, that we must
render to Cæsar the things that are Cæsar’s and to God the things that
are God’s, manifests itself in various ways, and this is one of them.
But, on the whole, Christianity knows no revolutionary breaches in the
established social order, as the history of its attitude towards the
institution of slavery shows. Men were encouraged to work out their own
salvation under existing political and social conditions.

  [91] Dr. Swete on Mark v. 43.

  [92] Mark i. 44.

  [93] John v. 2.

This spirit of conformity to the existing order in all lawful things,
and especially our Lord’s attitude towards priestly ceremonial, in the
case of the leper, throws a good deal of light upon the relation which
should subsist between the clergyman and the doctor in the treatment
of sickness. The Christian doctor will gladly subscribe to the words
of the favourite physician of Louis XIV, Ambroise Paré, ‘I treated the
wound, God healed it.’ Reverently and thoughtfully he will acknowledge
the power of prayer and the tranquillising influences of the spirit,
and will yield to the Church, acting by her representative duly
accredited and trained, her proper part in the work of restoration. The
parish priest will freely allow that the doctor and the nurse, with
all the appliances of modern medical science, provide the largest part
of the environment and conditions indispensable to recovery; and that
it is an act of presumption to reject all these scientific aids in
favour of some process of healing by faith alone without expert medical
aid.[94]

  [94] In Acts xxviii. 9, 10, there is an implication of co-operation
  between St. Paul and St. Luke the physician; see _Religion and
  Medicine_, pp. 365, 366; the language is technical.

Finally, it must be remembered that we cannot expect to find many
favourable notices of medical practice in an age and country in which
medical skill was at a very low ebb. ‘Medicorum optimus dignus est
Gehenna,’ said the Rabbis of the later Judaism.[95] In nothing has
human knowledge made more astonishing strides than in medical and in
surgical discovery; and, though we have been too prone in the past to
credit the medical profession with the whole of the healing work done
in Christ’s Church, the opposite extreme is to be avoided, and it is
well to acknowledge thankfully that ‘discoveries in the region of
medicine and surgery come to man through Him who is the Light and the
Life, the Divine Word.’[96]

  [95] See Dr. Swete on Mark v. 26; also Luke iv. 23; contrast Ecclus.
  xxxviii. sq.

  [96] _Lambeth Conference Report_, 1908 (vii. iii.).

(vii) In a previous chapter we dwelt at some length on the Gospel
conception of salvation (as illustrated by the words σῴζειν ὁλοκληρία),
as a just equipoise of spiritual, mental, and physical faculties and
functions. Two remarks may find a place here. The first is, that too
much stress may be laid upon the distinction between functional and
organic complaints. There are modern critics who wish to eliminate
the miraculous from the Gospel narrative, and deal with the sacred
text accordingly. For example, Professor Bousset says, in his vivid
way, ‘The community of the faithful drew the simple human picture of
Jesus on the golden background of the marvellous. But the picture can
be detached from that background with comparative ease.’ In cases
which are not to be explained simply by psychology, ‘the historically
intelligible is still close below the surface, and appears as soon as
we remove a few additions which are due to modern tradition.’ We have
to regard certain narratives as ‘legendary accretions (_Wucherungen_).’

If we cannot accept that position, it is not open to us to explain
all the miraculous agency of our Lord and His Apostles and the later
Church as consisting in the power to deal with functional ailments by
mental or psychic treatment. Nor is it open to us to limit the efficacy
of prayer to the stimulation of function and the treatment of nervous
disorders. And as, with the progress of medical science, the sphere of
the organic is continually growing at the expense of the functional,
the ultimate effect of such a concession on the side of religion would
be to limit her action to a negligible minority of cases. How would
a place be found for the healing of Malchus’s ear, if the organic be
excluded? But the Church believes that Christ is the Saviour of the
body and that the Holy Spirit is, as an early Father says, ‘given that
He may dwell in our bodies and sanctify them, that in so doing He may
bring them to eternity and to the resurrection of immortality, while He
accustoms them in Himself to be conjoined with heavenly powers and to
be associated with the Divine eternity of the Spirit.’[97]

  [97] _Novatian de Trinitate_, xxix.

A second remark is this. Whatever is allowed for the moulding force of
environment, Christ plainly teaches that man is never the mere creature
of circumstances. Christ is no fatalist philosopher. It is only the
evil that man deliberately assimilates which defiles him. ‘There is
nothing from without a man that entering into him can defile him’--a
parabolic saying which has a deep meaning. As it is with sin, so it is
with disease. Wilful sin is lawlessness in the spiritual being; disease
is disorder in the material being. Much remains yet to be done, which
lies well within the range of the free human will, to combat this
lawless disorder in the life of body and soul. We believe that the
spirit can impose its own order and law and harmony upon the material
elements of our bodily frame. This creed may be an ideal, but it is
the only really inspiring ideal; for beyond it lies the hope of final
perfection. Therefore, with faith and courage, let us press forward.

  Neither mourn if human creeds be lower than the heart’s desire!
  Thro’ the gates that bar the distance comes a gleam of what is higher.[98]

  [98] Tennyson, _Faith_.



THE CHURCH AND MENTAL HEALING

BY

ELLIS ROBERTS



THE CHURCH AND MENTAL HEALING

BY ELLIS ROBERTS


The object of this paper is to show and comment on the present
attitude of the Church of England, and of the Churches in communion
with her, towards psychic healing: but it may be advisable to remove
at the outset one or two misconceptions. With the theory and practice
of the Church in this country before the Reformation I am not now
concerned. It did not differ essentially from that of the Churches on
the Continent. But it should be noticed that a large number of centres
for psychic healing, spiritual hospitals, if one may use the term,
were removed by the destruction of shrines. In the medieval Church the
healer, with his specific charisma, was generally one who was reputed a
saint; and usually he healed more people after his death than before.
The curious in this matter may consult the evidence gathered in Dr.
Abbott’s ‘St. Thomas of Canterbury,’ and I think an unprejudiced reader
will gather from that book conclusions somewhat different from those
expected by the author.

After the Reformation what signs are there of psychic healing
encouraged and sanctioned by the Church? We are compelled to answer
that, in spite of great need, there is very little evidence of an
intelligent effort at mental therapeutics. ‘In spite of great need,’
I say; for this country and Scotland were affected most terribly by
the disgraceful witch mania which raged over Europe, especially in the
Protestant countries. There was ample material for the quiet, consoling
influence of psychic healing; but alas! the unfortunate ‘witches’
were left to the mercy of scared judges and malicious finders, to the
horrors of the trial by floating, or the ordeal of the secret mark. The
Church was, apparently, bigoted and powerless.

Yet the existence of an official power, inherent in the Body and acting
normally through the Ministers of the Church, was recognised officially
in the Canons of 1603–4, which, of course, are still of authority. In
the 72nd Canon we read:

‘No Minister or Ministers shall, without the Licence and direction of
the Bishop of the diocese first obtained and had under his hand and
seal, appoint or keep any solemn Fasts.... Neither shall any Minister
... presume to appoint or hold any meetings for sermons ... nor,
without such licence, to attempt upon any pretence whatsoever either of
possession or obsession, by fasting and prayer, to cast out any Devil
or Devils, under pain of the imputation of imposture or cosenage, and
deposition from the ministry.’

It is evident from this that, however little it was used, the
Episcopate was regarded as possessing the power to licence exorcisers
who might deal with diseases that we should call mental.

There is one other piece of evidence--practical this time--that the
healing power of the Church was not entirely forgotten or neglected.
Up to the time of the Hanoverian dynasty, the Kings of England touched
for scrofula, popularly known, from this method of cure, as ‘The
King’s evil.’ The most celebrated patient I can call to mind is Dr.
Johnson. It may be objected that this practice was not the work of the
Church’s ministry; but it must be remembered that most Canonists regard
the King of England as _mixta persona_ (that is, semi-clerical) by
virtue of his Coronation; and also the position given the Sovereign as
‘Supreme Governor’ of the Church would appear to invest him with an
ecclesiastical status.[99]

  [99] With touching for scrofula may be compared the blessing of
  ‘cramp-rings.’ The Sovereign of England used, on Good Friday, to
  bless rings which afterwards were distributed to sufferers from cramp
  or epilepsy. The last monarch to do this was Mary Tudor.

I admit, however, as must all candid persons, that on the whole the
Church has grossly neglected all forms of psychic healing; and so
welcome the more gladly the definite stand taken in the Lambeth Report,
1908.

That Report is the unanimous act, not merely of the Church of England,
but of those numerous bodies in communion with her: on the committee
which drew up the report were bishops from America, India, Scotland,
Central Africa, New Zealand, and England--a fact that can vouch for the
significance of the Report’s admissions and contentions. This Report I
shall take as the basis of my inquiry into the official attitude of the
Church of to-day towards Medicine and Psychic Healing.

The Report opens with a statement that is refreshing in its admission
of ignorance after the ready words of many sciolists and ‘quack’
healers.

‘Your Committee, which has had under consideration “Ministries of
Healing,” has felt itself at a disadvantage in discussing phenomena
which only in recent times have been the subject of scientific
investigation. In the present stage of knowledge it would be premature
for any except experts to hazard an opinion upon such topics as
the powers of “Mental Suggestion,” and the range of “Subliminal
Consciousness,” or to attempt to forecast the possibilities of “Mental”
or “Spiritual Healing.”’

While, however, displaying this diffidence in dealing with the
scientific side of their subject, the Committee is quite definite about
the spiritual aspect of pain, sickness, and suffering.

‘The Committee believes that Christ still fulfils in Christian
experience His power to give life, and to give it more abundantly; and
that the faith, which realises His Presence, is capable of creating
a heightened vitality of spirit, which strengthens and sustains the
health of the body. The Committee believes that sickness and disease
are in one aspect a breach in the harmony of the Divine purpose, not
only analogous to, but sometimes at least caused by, want of moral
harmony with the Divine Will; and that this restoration of harmony in
mind and will often brings with it the restoration of the harmony of
the body. It believes that sickness has too often exclusively been
regarded as a cross to be borne with passive resignation, whereas it
should have been regarded rather as a weakness to be overcome by the
power of the Spirit.’

Then the Committee considers briefly the ‘Mental Healing’ movement
outside the Church, and concludes the first part of their Report with a
very necessary warning ‘against the peril of being thoughtlessly drawn
into alliance, in the desire for health, with any who, under whatever
attractive name, are in antagonism with the Christian faith upon any
such subject as the Incarnation, the Resurrection, the reality of Sin,
and the use of the Holy Sacraments.’

In the second part it discusses ‘Spiritual Healing’ in the Church, and
makes the following statement:

‘The Committee would not wish to say a word in disparagement or
discouragement of those who may be pioneers in a new branch of service,
but it believes it would for the present be unwise to depart from an
attitude of watchfulness and reserve; and it is not therefore prepared
to recommend that at the present stage any authoritative recognition
should be given to those who claim to exercise these “Gifts of
Healing.”’

In the third part is a most welcome recognition of the position in the
Church of that profession which the Evangelist of the Nativity followed.

‘The Committee believes that medical science is the handmaid of God
and His Church, and should be fully recognised as the ordinary means
appointed by Almighty God for the care and healing of the human body.
The Committee believes that discoveries in the region of medicine and
surgery come to man through Him who is the Light and the Life, the
Divine Word.’

Then we have a brief recommendation that there should be an ‘addition
to the office for the Visitation of the Sick of more hopeful and less
ambiguous petitions for the restoration of health, always subject
to the Will of God ...; and that these petitions be used in close
connection with prayer for pardon and peace.’ And these prayers ‘may be
fitly accompanied by the Apostolic act of the Laying on of Hands.’

In the final paragraph the Committee considers the suggestion ‘that
these prayers should be accompanied by the anointing of the sufferer
with oil,’ and after a brief historical _résumé_, concludes:

‘In view of this evidence and the conditions prevailing in the Church
at the present time, the Committee is not prepared to recommend the
restoration of the unction of the sick, but it does not wish to go so
far as to advise the prohibition of its use, if it be earnestly desired
by the sick person. In all such cases the parish priest should seek the
counsel of the Bishop of the diocese. Care must be taken that no return
be made to the later custom of anointing as a preparation for death.’

With unction I do not propose to deal here. The question is really
theological; and the discussion as to its revival does not come within
the scope of this book. It may be said, however, that the problem will
probably solve itself in the near future, as in many missionary and
colonial dioceses, and in not a few English ones, the oil is blessed
by the Bishop, and may always be had by any parish priest whose sick
people desire this ancient rite.

With one exception, to which I shall return later, the Report may be
commended as a courageous, if rather jejune, effort to keep abreast
of modern psychology and its more practical manifestations. Let me
indicate briefly the encouraging signs in the Report.

(1) We have the definite confession that our present visitation
service is not all that can be desired. That we should use more
definite prayers for the recovery of the sick.

(2) The Report lays emphasis on the important truth that there must be
no banishing of the doctor. Enormous harm has been done by the crude
dualism of ‘Christian Science’--a theory which, if logically applied,
would prevent persons renewing the tissues of their body by food, or
removing dirt by soap and water. A doctor’s medicine is just as much a
prayer, a spiritual thing, when it is properly used, as any formula of
consolation inculcated by folk in ‘tune with the infinite,’ or people
who indulge in ‘higher thought.’

(3) The Report guards--though perhaps not quite strongly
enough--against the modern tendency to lay too much stress on mere
bodily health. As Christians and men of sense, we can have nothing to
do with a mode of thought that, by exaggerating the value of physical
well-being, would cheerfully have condemned to some lethal chamber an
Erasmus, a Coleridge, a Stevenson, or a Beardsley.

Now in these three matters the Report does seem to represent the real
central body of opinion in the Church of England. No living man,
perhaps, better expresses the view of the ‘man in the pew’ than the
Bishop of London, and he has been one of the first to recognise the
reality of the need for a greater recognition of the place of psychic
healing. Here is what Dr. Ingram said in his sermon on St. Luke’s Day,
1909:

‘We have on the one side those who really seem to have forgotten the
message of the Gospel of the body, who practically in their teaching
and even in their own belief simply think of the Gospel as addressed to
the soul. They seem to have forgotten that, in our own Holy Communion
Service, we pray that our sinful bodies may be made clean by His
Body, and some of St. Paul’s most stirring passages are about the
body. “Glorify God in your body.” But in their teaching and in their
belief they have lost to a certain extent the idea that the Gospel
has a message to the body at all. While on the other hand--and it is
so very characteristic of the history of the Church that this should
happen--outside the Church, with great exaggeration--and with, in my
opinion, much false teaching--people are calling the attention of the
Church to a forgotten truth. Yes--but with two very grave mistakes.
First, they ignore the learning and teaching which God has given us
through medical study and investigation about His laws and about His
will, and still more they ignore those blessed means of grace which
Christ Himself has laid down as the means of our communion with His
life.’

Or again, in a diocesan letter of May last year the Bishop of
Winchester (who was Chairman of the Lambeth Committee) emphasises the
right of medical science, of healing, and of nursing, to their due
place in the Church’s spiritual life, to a part in her prayers and
thanksgivings.

‘At the recent Lambeth Conference the view was expressed that we as a
Church have failed to show sufficient sympathy with the great works of
healing, of conflict with disease, and of the alleviation of suffering
carried on by the medical and nursing profession. The Divine blessing
vouchsafed in modern times, through the progress of knowledge and the
advancement of skill, have only in too small a degree been allowed to
enter into the prayers and thanksgivings of the Christian Church. It is
right that, with greater faith and a larger intelligence, the Church of
Christ should acknowledge that the gifts of healing and the discoveries
of science come from the Spirit of God, and should seek more
systematically to include this and kindred subjects in intercession and
praise.’

Not only, however, do we find the Bishops laying stress on the Church’s
duty in the matter of healing; but we also find eminent physicians,
who are also Churchmen, welcoming the priest in the sick room. In a
remarkable article contributed to the _Guardian_, Sir Dyce Duckworth
wrote:

‘Next, I will express my opinion that our twentieth-century Christendom
is generally lax and feeble in offering earnest prayers for the sick in
all stages and for a blessing on the remedial means employed. We should
look to a higher Power than that of man to aid us at the bedside, and
as thoughtful physicians we do seek these means to aid us.

‘Mental healing has a recognised and long-acknowledged basis of truth
and fact, and may be employed by honourable and skilled doctors who
have the gift and power to use it. I do not regard it as a fitting
duty for the “priests of the soul,” but one to be employed in its
appropriate place, as it becomes better understood in the course of
time as a part of legitimate ordinary treatment. I see no objection to
the practice of unction and laying-on of hands by Christian ministers
for those who desire it, but I regard this as an additional means of
help, a solemn form of assurance and comfort, together with prayerful
ministration, in conjunction with, and as a reinforcement of, the
best skill of legitimate medicine. To replace the latter by the
former I regard as a withholding of God’s gifts to man and therefore
unjustifiable. I conceive and believe that the gifts of the Holy
Spirit are capable of development in the course of the ages and under
our present dispensation, and that they were not limited in form and
exclusiveness to the age in which they were first somewhat crudely
manifested.’

We may welcome particularly Sir Dyce Duckworth’s emphatic pronouncement
about prayer. After all the basis of psychic healing is, and always
has been, prayer--whether the means used is oil, or water, or the
relics or even the shadow of holy men, as reported in the Acts of the
Apostles. The motive power that makes any of these means availing is
simply prayer. Prayer, whether spoken, desired, or acted, is the vital
force that gives the psychic movement all its validity. In insisting
on the importance and reality of prayer we have the support of such a
psychologist as Professor James, who writes: ‘As regards prayers for
the sick, if any medical fact can be considered to stand firm, it is
that in certain environments prayer may contribute to recovery and
should be encouraged as a therapeutic measure.’

And if the doctor is willing to recognise the great value of prayer,
the divine should not be backward in welcoming the doctor; nor should
he regard the medical man and the philosopher with suspicion if
they lay stress chiefly on the ‘reflex’ value of prayer; regard its
subjective effects, rather than investigate its real or objective power.

Once more let me quote the Bishop of London:

‘If I was ill, I would send for the best doctor, and get my parish
priest to come and pray by my side, believing that the double work of
Jesus Christ is shared by two great professions. It would be bad for
either to be banished from the sick room.’[100]

  [100] Answer to a questioner. Lent Mission, 1910.

That is the position on which we should lay stress. The future, I am
sure, lies with those who are willing to accept the religion of the
Incarnation and all that it signifies; the men who proclaim joyfully
and unwaveringly that Spirit has dwelt in flesh, but who also never
hesitate to assert that it is real Flesh in which the Spirit dwelt.
We must have no quarter with the damnable heresy that denies to sin
and suffering and disease a reality that it concedes to food and to
fees: and we can have no truce with the hard materialism that will
acknowledge the truth of nothing that is not revealed to the scalpel
or the test-tube. We may be thankful to-day that so many of our leading
physicians are becoming more and more willing to admit the reality
of prayer and the rights of the priest; we must take care that no
headstrong divines, in their new zeal for psychic healing, disparage or
despise the profession of St. Luke.



THE EUCHARIST AND BODILY
WELL-BEING

BY

ARTHUR W. ROBINSON, D.D.

VICAR OF ALL HALLOWS BARKING, EXAMINING CHAPLAIN TO THE
BISHOP OF LONDON, AND RURAL DEAN OF THE
EAST CITY OF LONDON



THE EUCHARIST AND BODILY WELL-BEING

BY ARTHUR W. ROBINSON, D.D.


The editor of this volume thinks that it should include a paper upon
the relation of the Eucharist to bodily well-being, and he has asked me
to deal with the question. I am fully aware of the difficulty of doing
so, and shall be well content if what I am able to say should lead
others to feel, as I do, that the subject is one which deserves much
reverent and careful attention. Perhaps that is all that any of us who
are taking part in the production of this book can hope to achieve. Our
desire is to be allowed to prepare the way for the clearer and stronger
action of the future. Little by little we are coming to see that the
scope of Christianity is bigger and more comprehensive than has for
some time been supposed. We can trace the steps by which religion and
its benefits had got to be looked upon as chiefly, if not exclusively,
concerned with individuals and their souls. And we can recognise that
there have been, and are, counter-movements at work whose tendency is
to raise us out of the limitations within which we had settled and to
place our feet in a larger room.

To begin with, there has been the revival of the Corporate aspect of
the faith, with an insistence upon the truth that the fullest life
is only to be realised through fellowship. Very slowly we have been
learning that we are not meant to be perfected as individuals, but
as parts of a whole of which Christ is the head and we are all of us
members. Already this sense of a corporate ideal has made a great
difference to our thoughts about the Church and the Sacraments, and has
begun to work a change in our beliefs as to the importance of unity and
the possibilities of spiritual power. And now it looks as if we are
being called to a yet farther enlargement of our conceptions and hopes.
To-day we are bidden to add to our knowledge in another direction.
This time it is the Corporal aspect of the Christian message which is
coming into view. We are to learn that our religion is not only for us
all as a whole, but that it has to do with the whole of each of us.
In other words it is good for the body as well as for the soul. In
some degree, no doubt, we have been accustomed to admit that the fact
of the Incarnation is a witness to the dignity of our bodies, and a
pledge of their ultimate glorification; but the admission has too often
lacked the full force of a living conviction. At the present moment,
however, many influences are combining in a remarkable way to send us
‘back to Christ’ with quite a new willingness to believe that He meant
His Church to stand in the forefront of all endeavours to bless men’s
bodies as well as to save their souls. Some day the world may be filled
with astonishment when it sees the fuller life of Christian fellowship
brought to bear upon the social and physical problems that are waiting
all around us for the power that can successfully deal with them.

Now, plainly such lines of thought must sooner or later converge upon
the Eucharist. We may confidently assert that if the fuller life,
corporate or corporal, is to be realised and manifested by us, it will
be through a more faithful and more intelligent use of the great means
which our Lord has provided for establishing a vital inter-communion
between Himself and His members.

Let us, then, approach the consideration of the mystery patiently, and
make a serious effort to grasp what we can of its meaning in right
perspective and due proportion. To this end it will be best to set
before our minds a clear statement of the aims and objects of the
highest of all Christian services.

       *       *       *       *       *

Briefly, we may say that the Eucharist is designed to fulfil a
threefold purpose for us. In the first place, it is a SIGN OF
PROFESSION. Sacraments are ‘not only badges or tokens of Christian
men’s profession’ (Art. xxv.); but this they most certainly are. Again
and again our Lord laid stress upon the duty and necessity of an open
acknowledgment of discipleship. From the earliest times the Sacrament
of His Body and Blood has been regarded as the oath and pledge of a
Christian’s loyalty. We may be sure that Christ meant it to be this.
Perhaps it is not altogether without significance that while the
ancient allegory of the Old Testament had made the test of obedience,
‘Thou shalt not eat’; in the sacred symbolism of the New Covenant it
became, ‘Do this,’ ‘Take eat.’ Through the Eucharist we declare our
readiness to be known as members of the Christian fellowship, and our
determination to be the true followers of Christ. That is its first and
simplest and most obvious signification.

Then further the Eucharist is AN ACT OF WORSHIP. It has a Godward
aspect, as well as a bearing towards the Church and the world. The
original institution had for its background the slaying of the lambs
and the pouring out of the blood of the Passover sacrifices. This,
said our Lord, is My way of celebrating the redemption, not merely of
a nation, but of a world. ‘This is My Blood of the Covenant, which is
shed for many.’ And accordingly whenever we solemnly repeat His words
and His acts, we do it in a Consecration Prayer addressed not to man
but to God. It has been thus that from the beginning the Church has
made the ‘perpetual memory,’ setting forth the finished sacrifice of
the Cross as the one and only ground and hope of man’s salvation. It is
thus that we draw nigh by the ‘new and living way which He has prepared
for us’ until we find ourselves amid all the company of heaven, nay
more, suppliants before the very throne of God, humbly but confidently
asking for the grace to help us in our earthly need. The prayer is
freely granted. The very offerings we present are blessed and returned
for our enrichment.

And so, finally, the Eucharist is a MEANS OF GRACE. The Altar becomes
a Table, and the Sacrifice ends in a Feast. We are bidden, not only
to ‘do this,’ but to ‘eat’ and ‘drink’ the Body and Blood. Here it is
that we reach the most mysterious aspect of all. Christ died and rose
again for us that we might live by Him. In this holiest fellowship
He fulfils His promise to be with us; in this highest worship we are
made partakers of His very self. How the blessing is bestowed we are
unable to explain. The explanations that have been attempted are not
really explanations, for they are not themselves intelligible. But we
can do better than explain. We can accept the fact, and look to prove
it in experience. That is the way of our English Church teaching.
‘The benefit is great,’ we are assured, ‘if with a true penitent
heart and lively faith we receive this Holy Sacrament, for then we
spiritually eat the Flesh of Christ and drink His Blood.’ ‘The Body
and Blood of Christ are verily and indeed’--not merely metaphorically
and symbolically--‘taken and received by the faithful.’ So it has been
believed since the foundation of the Church. ‘The doctrine of the
reality of the gift bestowed in the Holy Communion is universal in
the writings of the early Christians.’[101] And so it will be to the
end, when the holy feast is to be royally ‘fulfilled in the kingdom of
God.’[102]

  [101] Archbishop Temple, Primary Charge.

  [102] St. Luke xxii. 16.

It is in connexion with this third aspect of the Eucharist that we are
to attempt some further inquiry. Granted that ‘the benefit is great,’
of what does it consist? When we meet together in the gladness of loyal
fellowship to ‘lift up our hearts’ through the worship which unites us
to the Great High Priest within the veil; when we receive, as from His
hands, the more than tokens of our participation in His present life
and coming triumph; when after meekly kneeling for the benediction of
the heavenly peace, we rise and go our way--what thoughts may we dare
to cherish with regard to the blessing that has been granted to us?

Shall we answer that the gain must be of a spiritual character, that
what we have received is ‘the strengthening and refreshing of our
souls,’ that this is what is intended when the Eucharist is spoken of
as a ‘means of grace’? Assuredly we shall be right to answer thus. We
cannot insist upon it too strongly, or claim it too confidently. We may
not feel at the moment that we are stronger and more able for our life
and duty; but then we do not always feel the benefit of physical food
and medicine the moment they have been taken. The gain may not appear
for hours or even days, when perhaps we have ceased to think of the
source from which it came. Strangely enough, too, the immediate effect
of a medicine may be to bring out the mischief, and to make us imagine
that we are the worse for it rather than the better; and, as we know,
there have been times when it has almost seemed as if we had become
more distressingly conscious of our faults and failings as a result of
our Communion. In spite of it all, faith takes and gives humble thanks
for the blessing which has been received.

But, when we say that the blessing is of a spiritual nature, does that
mean that its effects are therefore limited to the spiritual sphere?
Can we think that they could be so limited? Is not the spiritual the
dominant factor in all our life, and must not the quickening and
gladdening of our spirits be felt, sooner or later, through every
department of our being?

Is it not true that the mind is profoundly influenced by the state of
the spirit; that, when the soul is at peace and in harmony with God’s
will, light shines as it were from within upon the hardest and most
perplexing problems around us? The good and wise Bishop Harold Browne
once declared at a Church Congress that he had never known what it
was to have intellectual doubts when present at the Holy Communion.
So, too, one of the most brilliant of our living teachers, speaking
of what he owed to the school chapel at Eton, has said, ‘There I
mercifully gained the habit of constant Communion; and this habit was
the one permanent stronghold of my faith when in after years at Oxford
the violent storms of intellectual trouble broke over my mind.’[103]

  [103] Canon Scott Holland, _Commonwealth_, March 1908.

If the mind may be helped through blessing received by the spirit, why
not the body also? We are realising more and more forcibly every year
how intimate is the connexion between mental action and the physical
organism. The two are so linked that every change in the one would
seem to be accompanied by a change in the other. Moreover, we are
assured by recent psychology that there are regions within us which lie
outside--above and below--the levels of our ordinary consciousness; and
that influences exerted in these regions are determining causes, not
merely of mental, but of bodily states. The close connexion between
the spiritual and the physical is clearly insisted upon in the New
Testament teaching. Our Lord showed plainly that the problem of bodily
disease was not to be treated apart from the more baffling needs of the
soul. In unhesitating terms He traced the miseries of morbid physical
conditions to moral wrongdoing and the presence of spiritual forces of
evil. The great word ‘Salvation’ strictly interpreted meant health; and
it was applied to both body and soul. It is no small part of Christ’s
redemption to ‘quicken your mortal bodies through His Spirit that
dwelleth in you.’[104]

  [104] Romans viii. 2.

The fact that the body has its appointed part and share in the Holy
Communion is in itself significant of the honour to be paid to it, and
might be taken to imply that it too is to be partaker of the benefit.
And when St. Paul declares that to receive ‘unworthily’ is to be in
danger of bodily sickness and even of death,[105] we can scarcely avoid
the inference that for the worthy recipient there might be expected
some corresponding advantage of quickened health and physical vitality.

  [105] 1 Cor. xi. 30.

       *       *       *       *       *

If we ask what the thoughts of early Christianity were in regard
to this matter, we need remain in no uncertainty as to the reply.
Recent discovery of documents and the critical study of the primitive
liturgies have given us a great deal of knowledge as to the religious
conceptions of those who met for Christian worship in the centuries
after the Apostles. At first it was with reluctance that they
committed their most sacred formularies to writing. Even as late as
the time of Athanasius the precise nature of the liturgy was kept as a
secret, to be revealed only to those who would be certain to regard it
with reverence and understanding. ‘It is not permitted,’ he wrote, ‘to
describe the mysteries to those who are not initiated.’[106] Not until
this discipline of secrecy was gradually abandoned, as Christianity
came to be accepted throughout the empire, were the actual forms of
service allowed to become public property. From these we are able to
gather much as to the place which the Eucharist held in the life of
the Church, and as to the hopes that were centred in it. These hopes,
without question, were primarily of a spiritual sort. Intercession was
offered with a fulness and intensity which witness to a wonderful power
of sustained devotion and a boundless range of sympathy. There were
many and various prayers for the peace and perfecting of the Church
and the enlightenment of the world, for the spread of true knowledge,
for the sanctification of all estates of believers, and above all, and
most of all, for the exaltation and glory of God in earth as in heaven.
But no one can so much as glance over these liturgies without being
strongly impressed by the fact that those who framed them and used
them had no notion of drawing any sharp line of distinction between
the spiritual and the material, between the blessing of the soul and
the good to be desired for the body. If they made intercession for the
Church that it might be ‘kept sheltered from storms’ and be ‘preserved
founded upon the rock until the consummation of the world,’ and were
careful to remember the higher needs of all classes of Christian
people, they were quick to add, ‘Let us pray for our brethren exercised
by sickness, that the Lord may deliver them from every disease and from
every infirmity, and may restore them whole to His Holy Church.’[107]
In the prayer of Consecration they would ask that the Bread and the
Wine might be made to all who received them a means of ‘faith, and
watchfulness, and healing, and sober-mindedness, and sanctification,
and renovation of soul and body and spirit.’[108] When they had
partaken of the elements they implored that these might ‘not be unto
condemnation but to salvation, for the benefit of soul and body.’[109]

  [106] _Apol. contra Arianos_, ii.

  [107] Clementine Liturgy.

  [108] Liturgy of St. Mark.

  [109] Clementine Liturgy.

Just ten years ago a very important addition was made to our store of
early liturgical documents by the publication of the Sacramentary of
Bishop Serapion, which dates from 350 A.D. The work consists of thirty
prayers such as a bishop would be likely to use.[110] Of these the
first six and the last twelve have to do with the celebration of the
Eucharist; the remainder relate to Baptism, Confirmation, Ordination,
and Burial.

  [110] A translation, with notes, has been edited by the Bishop of
  Salisbury in a small volume issued by the S.P.C.K. (Early Church
  Classics). The Greek text will be found in an article by the Rev. F.
  E. Brightman, _Journal of Theological Studies_, October 1899.

‘Life is a remarkable note of the collection,’ and it is life in
the fullest sense of the word. A few quotations will indicate this,
and will serve to strengthen the impression we have already sought
to convey as to the content of the blessing to be expected in the
Eucharist. In the opening Offertory prayer we find the words, ‘We
beseech Thee, make us living men.’ At the invocation of the Word upon
the elements, ‘Make all who communicate to receive a medicine of life
for the healing of any sickness.’ In ‘the prayer for those who have
suffered,’ ‘Grant health and soundness, and cheerfulness and all
advancement of soul and body.’ And in the final Benediction, ‘Let the
communion of the Body and Blood go with this people. Let their bodies
be living bodies, and their souls be clean souls.’ Provision is also
made for special prayer for the sick, and for the blessings of oils
and waters for their benefit, and in these connexions we find such
expressions as the following: ‘Be propitious, Master; assist and heal
all that are sick. Rebuke the sicknesses.’ ‘Grant them to be counted
worthy of health.’ ‘Make them to have perfect health of body and soul.’
‘Grant healing power upon these creatures that every power and every
evil spirit and every sickness may depart.’

It need scarcely be said that all such references to bodily wants
are set in a context which is marked by the simplest and most ardent
spiritual devotion. The physical is never allowed to usurp the first
place. But it is never forgotten. The early Christians believed that
the Life which was offered to them in fellowship with their Lord was
to extend to every part of their constitution, to ‘spirit and soul and
body.’[111]

  [111] These references to the Liturgies might be supplemented by
  quotations from the patristic writings, e.g. those of Irenæus,
  Tertullian, Cyril of Jerusalem, and Gregory of Nyssa. The last named
  went so far as to make Baptism with faith to be the salvation of the
  soul, and the partaking of the Eucharist the salvation of the body.
  See Bishop Gore, _The Body of Christ_, p. 69; and Bethune Baker,
  _Introduction to the History of Christian Doctrine_, pp. 399, 412.

In the light of our increasing knowledge of psychological processes,
we to-day are turning with new interest and sympathy to the old
stories of marvellous healing that have come down to us from early and
medieval times; and we are doing our best, by careful investigation and
analysis, to separate the well-authenticated cases from those for which
the evidence is not satisfactory. Already it is clear beyond reasonable
doubt that the instances in which directly religious influences wrought
extraordinary cures were far more numerous than have been generally
admitted by critical students of the history. In Mr. Percy Dearmer’s
volume entitled ‘Body and Soul’ a large number of testimonies have been
collected relating to such experiences at various times throughout the
Christian centuries. Thus the passage from St. Augustine is quoted,
in which he said that in his days miracles were still being wrought,
‘partly by the sacraments,’ and partly through other instrumentalities.
And instances of such miracles are described as they were recorded of
Bernard, and Francis, and Catherine of Siena; of Philip Neri, Fox,
Wesley, Cardinal Hohenlohe, Pastor Blumhardt, Father John of Cronstadt,
and many more. At least two cases are given in which the benefit was
definitely connected with the reception of Holy Communion.[112]

  [112] pp. 370, 381. Compare also the witness of St. Thomas à Kempis
  in regard to the power of this Sacrament. ‘The grace is sometimes so
  great that out of the fulness of devotion here given not the mind
  only but the weak body also feels great increase of strength bestowed
  on it’ (vires sibi praestitas sentiat ampliores). _De Imit._ iv. 1.

       *       *       *       *       *

It remains now to ask how far we English Church people have any
guidance to which we can appeal in our liturgical forms. We have to
admit that the well-being of the body does not receive the amount of
consideration in our Prayer-book that it did receive in more primitive
days. And yet the allusions are more frequent than many imagine. At
the outset of Morning and Evening Prayer we are reminded that we have
met ‘to ask those things which are requisite and necessary as well
for the body as the soul.’ Over and over we repeat the clause in the
Lord’s Prayer--‘Give us this day our daily bread.’ In the Creed we
joyfully attest our belief in the ‘resurrection of the body.’ In the
Litany we pray to be delivered from ‘plague and pestilence.’ A special
intercession is appointed for use ‘in the time of common plague or
sickness,’ as well as the more general one for all who are ‘any ways
afflicted, or distressed, in mind, body, or estate,’ with a particular
remembrance of ‘those for whom our prayers are desired.’ In the
Collects, which were intended primarily for use at the Eucharist, we
find petitions for help in ‘our infirmities,’ for defence from ‘all
adversities which may happen to the body,’ for preservation ‘both in
body and soul,’ and for readiness of ‘body’ to do the Divine will.
In the Office for Holy Communion we may be glad to note even clearer
traces of the Scriptural and primitive conception as to the place which
the physical part of our nature is entitled to hold in the religion of
the Incarnation.

When we say the prayer for the whole Church, we humbly beseech God
‘to comfort and succour all those who in this transitory life are
in trouble, sorrow, need, sickness, or any other adversity.’ In the
Prayer of Humble Access there are petitions, first to be met with in
the earliest form of the English service (1548), which sound like an
echo from the already quoted Prayer-book of Serapion, ‘that our sinful
bodies may be made clean by His Body, and our souls washed through
His most precious Blood.’ Even more intentionally significant are the
words of administration appointed to be addressed to every communicant,
‘The Body of our Lord Jesus Christ preserve thy body and soul unto
everlasting life’; ‘The Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ preserve thy
body and soul unto everlasting life.’ These references to the ‘body’
appear to have been deliberately introduced into our service. In the
Latin form the celebrant had said, ‘custodiat animam meam in vitam
aeternam.’[113] And as the body has its place of privilege, so also
it has a share of the corresponding responsibility. In the Prayer of
Oblation ‘we offer and present our souls and bodies to be a reasonable,
holy, and lively sacrifice.’ Finally, among the Collects suggested to
be said after the Offertory, and at other times ‘as occasion shall
serve,’ the foremost place is given to two which are closely connected
with the thought of bodily welfare. The first, ‘Assist us mercifully,
O Lord,’ was a prayer used in medieval times for persons who had gone
on a pilgrimage to seek physical as well as spiritual blessings; the
second is for the sanctification and governance of ‘both our hearts
and bodies,’ that we may be ‘preserved in body and soul, through our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.’

  [113] It would seem that the fuller form, ‘corpus et animum meam,’
  was used by the priest at his own communion in the Mozarabic rite;
  and that a similar form was prescribed in the Cologne use of the
  fourteenth century for communicating the people. (Daniel, _Codex
  Liturgicus_, i. pp. 105, 147.) Otherwise the rule was as stated
  above. It is interesting to note, however, that the words ‘corpus
  et’ were very generally employed in administering _to the sick_ in
  medieval England (see the _York Manual_, Surtees, lxiii. pp. 51, 52).

So then, in our Prayer-book, as in the older service books, the benefit
of the body is closely associated with the gain which is sought for the
soul. The physical effect is regarded as dependent upon the spiritual
gift. As the Bishop of Birmingham has put it, ‘though in the Holy
Communion the body is sanctified through the sanctification of our
spirit, and transformed and endowed, in subtle and secret ways which
pass our comprehension, with capacity for the life immortal; yet it is
through the spirit and not directly.’[114] The blessing begins with the
spirit, but it certainly does not end there.

  [114] _Body of Christ_, p. 64.

       *       *       *       *       *

This sketch of a great subject, imperfect as it has been, may serve
to turn the thoughts of some of us to an aspect of our religious
privileges which has not been very much before our minds. A friend
who had been spending a good deal of time on ‘cures’ on the continent
as well as in this country, wrote to me lately to say that he was
beginning to think that he ought to get more assistance towards
recovery from his religion than he had been getting. That is an idea
which accords with the temper of the first Christians, and is certainly
encouraged by a careful study of our own Prayer-book. We dare not
assert that all ‘the ills that flesh is heir to’ would disappear before
a quickened vitality of soul, and the mental soundness which might
follow from this; but we can well believe that the tendency of true
religion is all in the direction of physical health. Indeed, we may
go so far as to say that there is no restorative force that we know
of to compare with the influence of spiritual peace and gladness. We
have amongst us those who are fully conscious that they have owed much
bodily strength to prayers and to sacraments. And there are medical men
who would not hesitate to give their confirmatory testimony from what
they have seen in their experiences of the sick.

Sometimes we hear of small attendance at the weekly or daily Eucharist.
If this is to be remedied it will be because truer views have come to
prevail again of the meaning of the greatest service of the Church. We
shall recover the spiritual fervour and force of primitive Christianity
when we learn once more to give the Eucharist its proper place in our
worship and our life. We might be helped to do this if, like the first
Christians, we accustomed ourselves to look to our Communions not only
for the blessing that they can bring to our souls, but for the lesser,
and yet not less real, blessing which we may find in them for the
sanctification and preservation of our bodies.



PRAYER AND MENTAL HEALING

BY

ARTHUR CHANDLER, D.D.

BISHOP OF BLOEMFONTEIN



PRAYER AND MENTAL HEALING

BY THE BISHOP OF BLOEMFONTEIN


This paper is concerned with Mental Healing; its object is to suggest,
in a tentative way, how Mental Healing may be effected by Mental
Prayer. But, in order to do this, it is necessary (at the risk of
repeating what may have been written by others) to refer to certain
premises leading up to the conclusion which I wish to draw.

(1) In the first place it is coming to be recognised that
‘consciousness’ must be understood in a far wider and more general
sense than we have been accustomed to associate with it. Alongside of
the active work of the intellect with which, e.g., we study mathematics
or pursue our profession, there is a large, dreamy, half-conscious
tract of mind, not sharpened to a single point, like the active
intellect, but consisting in a multiplicity of mind-centres (mental
ganglia, as we might call them) diffused throughout the body. We knew
before that our body was a microcosm or an epitome of the world in
which it was found, and now we are learning that the same is true of
our minds. Primitive kinds of consciousness have been carried up with
us in our ascent from lower grades of being, and survive, dormant but
real, over against the intellect which is the palmary achievement of
our race. This residual consciousness (the consciousness which exists
outside of the rational intellect) consists largely of instincts and
capacities which regulate the lives of other animals, and which were
employed by man in his primitive state, but for which he has no use in
his present-day existence; modes of receptivity and reaction, which
were natural to him in his dreamy childhood, but which are discarded by
him in the aggressive, self-assertive, wide-awake condition in which
he now lives. Mr. Myers, in his ‘Human Personality,’ gives a very
attractive and convincing account of this inheritance from our ‘lowly
ancestors.’ But probably we have to go deeper still to account for
parts of the consciousness which we thus inherit. The rooted attachment
to home, and the blind tenacity with which, in the teeth of reason,
men cling to life, exhibit a more primitive mode of consciousness than
that of animal life. Here we will quote some very suggestive words of
Professor Stewart:

‘Transcendental feeling I would explain genetically as an effect
produced within consciousness by the persistence in us of that primeval
condition from which we are sprung, when life was still as sound asleep
as death, and there was no time yet. That we should fall for a while,
now and then, from our waking, time-marking life, into the timeless
slumber of this primeval life is easy to understand; for the principle
solely operative in that primeval life is indeed the fundamental
principle of our nature, being that “vegetative part of the soul” which
made from the first, and still silently makes, the assumption on which
our rational life of conduct and science rests--the assumption that
life is worth living. When to the “vegetative” the “sensitive” soul
is first added, the Imperative (Live thy Life) is obeyed by creatures
which, experiencing only isolated feelings, and retaining no traces of
them in memory, still live a timeless life, without sense of past or
future, and consequently without sense of selfhood. Then, with memory,
there comes, in the higher animals, some dim sense of a self dating
back and prospecting forward. Time begins to be.’

This, then, is our starting point; that besides the single, supreme,
rational activity, which we call intellect, there exist in us other
forms of consciousness similar to those which accompany the growth
of the plant or the life of the animal; and that this residual
consciousness, however much we may discard or disown it, continues to
live and work, and does things which the proud intellect is unable
to do. On the other hand, we must not forget that these forms of
feeling and instinct, of perception and reaction, which we regard as
our heritage from lower grades of life, are enormously modified by
their juxtaposition with a rational intellect. The unity of nature
which comprehends both the intellect and them, makes itself felt;
this lower form of mentality is still the mentality of a rational
being; and the general position may be described by saying that there
exists a decentralised consciousness, diffused through the organism,
‘irrational, but capable of sharing in reason, and of listening to
it,’ as Aristotle would say, and manifesting itself in a power of
receiving impressions, manipulating them, and reacting upon them, which
in our present state of ignorance we describe by the convenient word
‘abnormal.’

(2) Because the residual consciousness is thus diffused throughout the
body, it can exercise control over the various parts of the body, just
as the central intellect exercises control over the body as a whole.
As the reason can set the body in motion by commands issued through
the brain and travelling down the motor nerves, so the departmental
consciousness can initiate changes and disturbances in the various
nerve centres with which it is associated. This, we take it, is what
happens in all cases of mental healing. The phenomenon is physical
as well as psychical; it consists not merely in the inhibition of
the feeling of pain, but in such a modification of the nerve tissues
as removes the cause of the pain. A real cure is effected, and it
is effected by the action of the residual consciousness upon that
particular part of the organism.

(3) This decentralised, residual consciousness can work best when
the rational intellect is quiescent--when, we may say, the central
office is closed. At such times man ceases for the time to be an
argumentative, striving creature; the placid, vegetative, ruminative
life, the life of growth and instinct, asserts itself; submerged modes
of consciousness begin to stir and act, like fairies dancing when the
sun has set.

And as sleep is the typically quiescent state, it will be specially in
sleep, natural or induced, that these lower modes of consciousness will
exhibit their activity.

(4) In order that they may act, a ‘cue’ or suggestion of some sort must
be given to them. The most marked characteristic of this residual
consciousness is its receptivity. It executes, but cannot originate.
It can retain in the memory the whole of a long poem which it has
heard, and it can solve a problem by right adjustment of its elements;
but in each case the facts must be given to it in order that it may
deal with them. In itself it is dreamy and desultory; if it is to work
efficiently, it must be stimulated and concentrated by the transmission
to it of a clear and forcible suggestion.

(5) On the other hand, although it must take its orders from the
reason, it is only natural that one residual consciousness should
be more _en rapport_, feel more at home, with another residual
consciousness. The reason is like a parent or schoolmaster, and these
consciousnesses are like children. They receive their directions from
above, but are far more at home with each other, canvassing their
instructions, and sometimes parodying and making fun of them, as
children do with the admonitions of their elders. In matter of fact
there is often something freakish and elfish about this consciousness,
it reminds one of the submerged spirit of Dionysus reasserting itself
in Denys l’Auxerrois as described by Mr. Pater.

(6) Now, if one residual consciousness can be brought into a
relationship of definite and serious purpose with another residual
consciousness, the influence thus exerted will be stronger than any
which can be exerted directly by the reason itself. To revert to our
former illustrations, a monitor whose own character is receptive of the
master’s ideals can exert on other children an influence greater than
that of the master himself.

(7) The reason of man, then, may be well able to convey clear
instructions to his own residual consciousness, and send it to
associate with, and work upon, some other residual consciousness. And
if the instructions conveyed, and the work done, concern the curing of
some ailment, a case of mental healing will be the result.

Let A be the healer and B the patient; let _a_ and _b_ represent
the residual consciousness of each of them; further, let A^1 be the
rational intellect of A, and B^2 the seat of B’s disease. In that case
the following diagram will illustrate the process:

[Illustration]

That is, A concentrates his intellect (A^1) on transmitting a message
to his own submerged consciousness (_a_); this submerged consciousness
works upon B’s submerged consciousness and stimulates it to curative
action on the seat of B’s disease. Further, the best time for _a_ to
thus work upon _b_ will be when A and B are both asleep. A will have
concentrated the reason on the idea of helping B just before going to
sleep. Mr. Hudson, in his ‘Psychic Phenomena,’ gives many illustrations
of cures thus effected.

(8) But the capacity of A to exert a strong and right influence must
depend on the strength of his will and the clearness of his insight;
and if he is a humble man, he will recognise his own weakness and
ignorance. In proportion, then, to his affection for B, he wants to
bring to bear on B a stronger force and a higher wisdom than his own. A
few exceptionally strong and wise people may bring help, of themselves,
to their friends in the manner described in the last section; but the
majority, being conscious of their own limitations, will turn elsewhere
for succour, i.e. will pray.

(9) In very many cases prayer is a definite petition to God, that
God will Himself act directly on our friend by bestowing a definite
blessing on him, e.g. recovery from a specific ailment. But that is not
quite the highest or the best kind of prayer. God loves to act through
us; Christ sends out his disciples, that through them He may continue
to do His gracious works. We can combine a humble reliance on God with
the offer of ourselves as His instruments, if our prayer conforms to
that Prayer of Quiet or Silence of which mystical writers tell us.
Then, instead of ourselves acting directly on our friend, and instead
of asking God to act directly upon him, we shall just concentrate our
attention upon God with special intention for our friend. We shall hope
that a Divine response from God will, during our sleep perhaps, enter
our own subconscious self (which we have, through the concentration of
our attention, made receptive of such responses) and through us work
upon that of our friend. In such a case the diagram will be as follows:

[Illustration]

We may add that this Prayer of Silence not only renders us receptive
of Divine influences, which may then through us be transmitted
to our friend; also it embodies the true attitude of humility in
relation to God. We know not what we should pray for as we ought.
We are not to dictate to God what blessing He is to send. We simply
bring our friend’s evil case before Him in the very act of our own
loving concentration upon Him, and offer ourselves as the agents for
the transmission of that blessing, whatever it may be, which He in
His wisdom may will to send. By a strong act of sympathy we identify
ourselves with our friend, and trust God to provide the right remedy.
‘Have mercy upon _me_,’ said the woman in the Gospel, ‘my daughter is
grievously vexed with a devil.’

If we can combine this living sympathy for our friend with a humble
trust in God’s power and wisdom, and further offer ourselves as the
instrument through which God may act, we shall be practising the
highest and purest form of intercession within our reach. And this form
of intercession may be offered in a silent act of Contemplation, in
which distracting thoughts are set aside, the favourable attitude of
receptivity is attained, and a loving and concentrated appeal is made
to the love of God. It may, perhaps, encourage us to engage in this
highest form of prayer, if we recognise that it has this intercessory
side. An objection is sometimes brought against the practice of
Contemplation as described by spiritual writers, on the ground that
it is self-centred and selfish. There is never much force in such an
objection, since the contemplative who is concentrating his soul on God
is thereby making himself a ladder down which Angels of Grace descend
on others as well as himself; he is diffusing an atmosphere of God’s
presence, with the blessings that flow from it.

When, however, Contemplation is practised with definite intercessory
intention, its beneficence is clearly and unmistakably emphasised.

(10) It is well to dwell a little more on the quality of humility which
should characterise all such prayers. We have no right to dictate to
God what His answer shall be. We have no right to assume that it must
be His will to remove all pain and suffering. Any such assumption leads
logically to conclusions which those who make it might not be prepared
to accept. If pain and suffering are contrary to God’s will, and God
is omnipotent, it follows that there can be no such thing as pain and
suffering; and as pain and suffering are located in the body, it will
further be concluded that there is no such thing as a body; and here at
once we have Christian Science in a nutshell.

We may try to escape from this conclusion by distinguishing an absolute
and a contingent will of God, and arguing that pain, as such, is
contrary, but under certain circumstances is not contrary, to the
will of God. But this really abandons the whole position, since we do
not know whether the case of our friend is covered by the ‘certain
circumstances’ or not, and therefore are unable to dogmatise as to
God’s will in the matter. No one in his senses imagines that God wills
pain for the sake of pain. Everyone would agree that, if sin had not
come into the world, there would be no occasion for pain. But then sin
has come into the world; the only condition of man with which we are
acquainted is his fallen condition; in that fallen condition sin and
suffering are mingled inextricably to a degree which utterly condemns
dictation or dogmatism on our part. Ignorant people like ourselves
must, then, be humble in our prayers. We bring our friend’s illness
before God; ‘Lord, he whom Thou lovest is sick’; often God’s love may
be shown in the removal of the suffering; sometimes in the provision of
grace sufficient to enable the sufferer to rejoice in his infirmities.

(11) What has been said in this paper is liable to an easy and
obvious criticism. It will be said that the whole thing consists of
guesses; and further, that these guesses are incapable of scientific
verification. I cheerfully accept both statements, and am not
particularly affected by either. All increase of knowledge has been
made through guesses, and in the case of an intricate subject like
that before us, we must be content to go on guessing for a long time.
Further, there may be verification which would not conform to the
more rigorous methods, but which would be sufficient for practical
purposes. If we find that such prayer as I have described is followed
by relief, either physical or spiritual, to him for whom we pray; and
if this sequence occurs again and again under different conditions, the
cumulative weight of such experience will justify a humble belief that
God is indeed using us as vehicles of His grace and love.

(12) Finally, I should like to add a few words as to the general
attitude which, it seems to me, we should adopt with regard to facts
of mental healing. I have assumed that we are face to face with
certain psychical facts which for the first time are winning general
recognition of their authenticity. That is, we are witnessing the
birth and development of a special branch of psychology. The whole
inquiry into the phenomena of the subconscious, or subliminal, or
subjective, or residual consciousness (whatever we choose to call it)
is a psychological inquiry. It is for the psychologist to investigate
the relation in which such phenomena stand to the normal working of the
mind; and it is for the psychologist and physiologist together to probe
the method by which subconscious mentality affects the diseased tissue,
and in many cases effects a cure. The facts are becoming patent to all;
the causes are a subject matter for science. Where, then, does religion
come in? I answer that whilst the forces at work are psychical, and the
inquiry into their mode of operation is scientific, they can be best
put in motion by religion.

Some such demarcation of spheres seems to me to be essential. It would
be fatal to assume that all manifestation of subconscious activity is
supernatural; that all mental healing is necessarily spiritual healing.
The facts postulate neither a special spiritual gift, nor a special
theory of the universe (such as that of Christian Science) to account
for them. They are, we repeat, psychical facts, and come under the
domain of psychology.

Further, as I have suggested above, religion is not the only motive
power by which they can be roused to action. A rigorous process of
attention and concentration of the mind, which has been rendered
quiescent by the elimination of other thoughts and ideas, seems to be
the condition under which the healer acts successfully; and such a
process is not confined to the sphere of religion.

But, on the other hand, we Christians possess two great qualifications
in this matter. First, in the higher forms of prayer we have ready to
our hand a peculiarly effective method of concentration and attention;
and, secondly, through the use of this method, we can link our own
action with the action of God, correcting our ignorance by the wisdom
of God, and supplementing our weakness by the power of God.

       *       *       *       *       *

NOTE.--In this article I have dealt with healing as exercised on the
ills of another, not on one’s own ills; and the prayer associated with
such healing has therefore been presented as intercessory prayer.
But of course the troubles which we have in view may be our own. In
such a case the method will be much the same as that sketched above;
relief may be effected subconsciously through the medium of prayer.
But the procedure is now much simpler. Instead of sending out our
subconsciousness (the phraseology is necessarily materialistic and
fearfully inadequate) to work on that of another, we merely commission
it to work on the seat of our own malady. The method now becomes one
of auto-suggestion, i.e. the healing suggestion is made by us to
ourselves. We know the power of this process in the moral sphere; we
know how, by fixing our minds on lofty and ennobling ideas, we can
break the power of temptation, not by a frontal attack, but by getting
round it and above it to a higher level of life and thought. This,
in fact, is the main purpose and effect of meditation as ordinarily
practised. The scope of meditations only have to be slightly extended
in order to apply to our physical as well as our moral troubles. But,
although this method of healing becomes simpler in procedure, because
applied to ourselves, yet for the same success it demands still greater
humility and purity of intention. If, when we pray for others, it is
hard for us to believe that the prayer may be really and effectually
answered in other ways than by the removal of the physical suffering,
it is still harder for us to recognise this in our own case. To meet
this difficulty, it will be well that prayer for our own relief should
be as much as possible silent prayer. We shall concentrate our
attention on God’s love and power, as revealed in Christ, just spread
out our trouble before Him, and resolve to trust Him to the uttermost.
The suggestion thus conveyed to our own subconscious life will be
charged with God’s grace; if physical healing results, the restored
health will be transformed by dedication to God’s service; if the
relief takes the form of strength to endure, it will be none the less
relief, lifting us above the level of self-pity into tranquil communion
with Christ crucified, and may be none the less an instrument in God’s
hands for the doing of His blessed will.



THE METAPHYSICS OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

BY

M. CARTA STURGE



THE METAPHYSICS OF CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

BY M. CARTA STURGE


In attempting to criticise the Metaphysics of Christian Science, as put
forth in the book which claims to be the authority for its doctrine,
‘Science and Health, with Key to the Scriptures,’ one is tempted to
quote the famous chapter on ‘Snakes in Iceland,’ which runs ‘There are
no snakes in Iceland,’ and to say at the outset that Christian Science
has no Metaphysics. Since, however, it claims to explain the Universe,
and to give a theory of such metaphysical subjects as Matter and
Spirit, as well as of Unity and Reality, it may be well to examine its
statements on these abstruse matters to see if they can justly claim
to have value as Metaphysics, to search the island, as it were, before
pronouncing that there are no snakes in it.

Undoubtedly Christian Science owes a good deal of its attractiveness
to its teaching of a sort of popular Idealism. It was put forth at
a time when a great wave of Materialism had overspread the Christian
world, not owing only to discoveries in Natural Science, which seemed
in the first flush of their triumph, before they had been adjusted with
other fields of thought, to destroy all belief in Spirit, but owing
also to the fact that Religion had been for so long established and,
apparently, firmly seated upon a secure spiritual foundation, that it
had been loosely taught as to its fundamental basis. So little had its
relation with physical things been explained that the spiritual and
physical aspects of the Universe had become, as it were, separated
in thought and shut up respectively in watertight compartments. The
result was that in the popular mind the two worlds, the spiritual and
the physical, stood in a merely artificial relation with each other,
connected, as it were, by unmeaning hooks, instead of standing in an
intimate organic relation, so close that no true statement regarding
the one could possibly stand in collision with the truth of the other.

In consequence of this merely artificial relation of the two in the
popular mind, at the first breath of the new scientific announcements
the two worlds in the minds of only too many fell apart, and the
spiritual world floated away, if one may say so, to nowhere, whilst the
physical, with all its limitations, its ruthless laws, its indifference
to the individual, its total disregard of pain, and its insurmountable
barriers, reigned alone. Materialism had triumphed with its apparently
hard-and-fast solidity; whilst the ideals of Poetry, the truths hinted
at by Art, the revelations of the prophet, the dreams of the young and
the visions of the old, and our intuitions of unseen realities which
cannot be uttered, were consigned by many, supposed to be wise, to the
region of illusions, the realm of nothingness, and Man seemed indeed to
be nothing more than a creature helplessly subject to circumstance, the
sport of every wind, and entirely beyond the region of hope wherever
physical aid failed.

It was in the midst of a state of things something like this that
Christian Science came with its contrary announcement that all is
Spirit, and this given forth with the energy and freshness which always
accompanies the discovery of a new aspect of truth, or, as in this
instance, the rediscovery of a world-old truth which had been for a
time despised or forgotten. And with it came a message of hope, the
assurance that we are not the creatures of mere circumstance, that we
are not limited to physical life, nor altogether tied down by its
limitations, that things are not as hard and fast as they seem, and
that in the power of Spirit we can throw down many a barrier and rise
above circumstances. Most welcome teaching, and yet to those of us
accustomed to singing, on the third evening of the month, ‘With the
help of my God I shall leap over the wall,’ it seems strange that it
should appear quite so new! However, as before said, Materialism had
darkened much of this old truth and somewhat blinded our eyes. Whether,
therefore, it seems new or old to us, we can only welcome a powerful
reassertion of Idealism, of the supremacy of Spirit, provided it come
with good credentials, and be so stated as to appeal to the best and
sanest part of ourselves, and with the breadth and depth of treatment
that so wonderful a truth calls for. Unfortunately, it is here that
Christian Science fails us. It is a cheap, too much ready-made Idealism
that is put before us, and one that rather appeals to our less sane
moments than to our more brilliantly illuminated ones.

Idealism, by reason of its very greatness, by its perception of things
that lie outside our senses, by its apprehension of infinities far
beyond our grasp, has many and great difficulties to encounter as
soon as, leaving the inspired region of Poetry, and of prophetic
vision, it tries to present itself as rational to our intellect, and as
conformable with our knowledge of physical things. Had the foundress
of Christian Science confined herself to the uninquiring assertions of
Seership, and left the explanation of Spiritual truths (of which no one
can deny that she caught some luminous glimpses) to minds equipped with
the necessary knowledge and training, Christian Science would have been
shorn of much of its incoherence and false teaching, and perhaps have
proved itself a real ally to Christianity.

But the foundress was not content with the rôle of giving forth such
insight as she may have had as a Seer. She tries to explain it, and
the consequence is such a tangle of incoherent, inconsistent, confused
statements, contradictory to each other, as has, perhaps, never
seriously been given to the world before. And where, occasionally, the
statements, at least as to their wording, are clear and unmistakable in
their meaning, so far from clearing away the difficulties of Idealism,
they add much to the obscurity, and leave the subject in a position
likely to act in the long run in favour of Materialism rather than in
the direction intended.

We will take an instance. Mrs. Eddy lays great stress on the Oneness of
the Universe. Here we shall few of us quarrel with her, for Unity is
the root-idea of Thought, whether scientific or philosophic, or even
that of mere common-sense, since it is only by Unity that one thing
can be seen in relation to another. The Unity is, however, difficult
of apprehension, since it is essentially an idea--although none the
less real for that--being, from the physical point of view, never seen
or apprehended as a material thing. Therefore it is non-material,
something spiritual or mental to be realised by insight other than that
of the senses. Mrs. Eddy has this insight, and has it very strongly.

Idealism, however, is no sooner arrived at than it presents us with a
very hard knot to untie, and it is here that we shall see how far Mrs.
Eddy can give us any adequate metaphysical solution.

She realises, like much greater thinkers, how hard it is to understand
how our material world can be contained in a spiritual idea, and that
Matter and Mind are of difficult reconciliation, although, if we grant
they both exist, they are so obviously related that they must be
reconcilable within a Unity somehow. This reconciliation has cost much
thought for thousands of years on the part of the deepest thinkers,
but the easy way of solving the difficulty in the case of shallow
thinkers is to do it by throwing one or other of the members in this
pair of opposites away, to deny it existence, and so to attain a cheap
conception of unity by pronouncing either matter or mind to be a mere
illusion. The Materialist tries cancelling Mind. Mrs. Eddy throws out
Matter and with it our entire physical world, not only the objects
in it, but all mental conceptions in regard to it, such as the Laws
of Nature, and all possible theories as to its being a manifestation
of Mind. All our conceptions of its laws are errors conceived by the
intellect, she teaches,[115] which is itself non-existent. In fact, the
world only _is_ because we falsely think it is. We have only to unthink
it, and it will disappear. Spirit is One, and therefore the many
objects of the world cannot be included in it; and only Spirit is real,
therefore the material world cannot be real. Such is her argument, and
she cannot allow that Matter may be a manifestation of Mind or created
by Mind, or have any relation with it of whatever sort. ‘Spirit and
Matter no more commingle,’ she says, ‘than light or darkness,’ and she
asserts that ‘Science reveals nothing in Spirit out of which to create
Matter.’

  [115] For proofs of my assertions regarding the teachings of _Science
  and Health_, I must refer the reader to my book _The Truth and Error
  of Christian Science_.

We have here attained, if we have attained it, Oneness at the expense
of the Many. It is One simply by means of containing nothing, and, in
place of the inspiring conception of the true thinker of the Unity as
One because it includes the Many harmoniously related within itself--a
Unity of infinite richness and fecundity--we have a dead, empty One,
misnamed Unity because there is nothing to unite. The worship of such a
Oneness, it has well been said, would be the worship of the None. Such
an One would be all-exclusive instead of all-inclusive, and be gained
by the annihilation of everything, instead of by the inclusion of all
within Itself as the vital expression of Itself.

In yet another way Mrs. Eddy’s statements concerning Unity contradict
themselves. We have seen that in her conception of Unity the whole
world, as we know it, has to be evaporated, as it were, into
nothingness, and it has been roundly denied that Spirit had anything to
do with its creation. Yet the world has to be accounted for, and in the
sequel we find that, according to ‘Science and Health,’ it _has_ been
created--but by whom or what?

It has been created by the mind of Man, by his thinking power, but not,
as we shall find if we read the book carefully, by that part of man’s
mind that is real, but by that part of it which is constantly asserted
to be unreal, to be, in fact, as much nothing as the world itself is
nothing. This part of Man, which is over and over again affirmed to be
nothing, is the Mortal Mind, and is endowed with the most tremendous
creative powers; for by its thought, its false thought, which is again
nothing, it has created for itself a world of objects, and objects
connected with each other, not in a state of chaos, as one would expect
in a world created by false thought, but objects connected with each
other in a marvellously ordered sequence, obeying exact laws with
the utmost obedience--laws so elaborate and complex in their results
that it has taken Man ages to understand them even a little (although
in Mrs. Eddy’s view his own creation), and yet, in their ordered
complexity, so simple that they are reducible to a few heads. Such is
the wonderful world created by the Mortal Mind, and with which God, as
All-in-All, has nothing to do! Thus we have two Creators, two unrelated
worlds, and we are landed in a Duality which is absolutely opposed to,
and inconsistent with, the Oneness on which Mrs. Eddy lays so much
emphasis, and which consequently disappears.

All the rest of Mrs. Eddy’s so-called metaphysical ideas, her teaching
on Reality, on the nature of Man, on what constitutes truth and what
error, and so on, are equally contradictory, and we are driven to the
conclusion that such a hopeless confusion of contradictions is scarcely
worthy of the name of Metaphysics or of serious discussion.

We welcome, as we have said, so emphatic an announcement of Idealism,
and of the truth of the supremacy of Spirit, but must deeply regret
that the Idealism is of so poor and thin a character, and the idea
of Spirit and of the Eternal Unity so deplorably impoverished. For,
indeed, thus presented, they could not long hold their own, and would
soon give place again to the darkness of Materialism.

However, rather than criticise, let us welcome the recall to Idealism,
to the recognition of Spirit as the supreme reality in which all
physical laws find their truth, and, by a careful study and meditation
upon the length and breadth and depth of these great ideas, as set
forth in Christianity and all that led up to it, endeavour to do our
little part towards a better understanding of these things, and thus in
practice we shall indeed find that many a seeming solid barrier can be
overleapt, the crooked made straight and rough places plain.


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RELIGION AND MEDICINE.

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